The Jerusalem Post

Gov’t says Cameroon separatist attacks kill four members of security forces

-

YAOUNDE (Reuters) – Separatist­s from Cameroon’s Anglophone region have killed four security forces in several attacks over the past few days, the government said on Saturday, an unpreceden­ted violent turn to a movement that risks morphing into a full blown insurgency.

A government crackdown on the separatist­s has killed dozens of people since October and driven many into the arms of a once-fringe separatist movement ahead of presidenti­al elections in 2018.

It followed on from demonstrat­ions a year ago by English-speakers in the western region bordering Nigeria against what they see as a marginaliz­ation by the mostly French-speaking government of President Paul Biya, who has been in power for 35 years. Only a minority want to secede, however.

The secessioni­sts have been around for decades, but operated undergroun­d and had been largely nonviolent until a few weeks ago.

A spokesman for the separatist­s acknowledg­ed the latest attacks but disputed details of the government account, and said five security forces had been killed.

In Saturday’s statement, Communicat­ions Minister Issa Tchiroma gave more details of the killing of two gendarmes reported on Tuesday and Wednesday, and said two further attacks on Thursday night had killed two soldiers.

Referring to attacks earlier in the week, Tchiroma said assailants armed with machetes stormed a high school in the town of Jakiri on Tuesday. The separatist­s are disrupting schools that teach in French.

Gendarmes arrived on the scene to stop them, but one was killed in the resultant scuffle.

Tchiroma said he was “executed,” but Cho Ayaba, a leading member of the political wing of the separatist movement who lives abroad told Reuters in Dakar by telephone that he was killed in a firefight.

Then, on Wednesday, in the restive city of Bamenda, another attack left a gendarme dead, Tchiroma said. Ayaba reported two deaths of security forces in that attack.

On Thursday night, insurgents killed a soldier in Bamenda by slitting his throat, Tchiroma said, and another female soldier guarding a bridge.

“As I speak, four members of the Defense and Security Forces on duty have been killed, murdered by terrorists on behalf of the secessioni­st movement,” Tchiroma said.

Ayaba contradict­ed that, saying all of the deaths had occurred in shootouts and that no one had had their throat slit.

“That’s absolute nonsense,” he said. “There was no physical contact.”

Cameroon’s language divide is a legacy of World War I, when the League of Nations split the former German colony of Kamerun between allied French and British victors.

Hundreds of Anglophone Cameroonia­ns were swept up in mass arrests following demonstrat­ions on Octobe r 1, and at least 5,000 have fled the crisis for neighborin­g Nigeria.

The crackdown, which included cutting the Internet, locking up opponents and using helicopter gunships to fire on civilians, and a lack of any political solution is fast transformi­ng a protest movement into an armed rebellion.

“Cameroon soldiers are enforcing an occupation,” Ayaba said. “The only thing that will make us stop these attacks is if the regime withdraws... if they stop using the military to impose political exclusion and systematic terror on our people.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel