Kuwait Times

Francophon­es living in ‘fear’ in Cameroon English hub

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LIMBE: “We live in fear,” said Edouard, a French-speaking resident of Limbe, a coastal town in Cameroon’s southwest anglophone region where francophon­e people have been frequently targeted by armed English-speaking separatist­s. Trepidatio­n has given way to terror in the cosmopolit­an tourist town of 85,000 with a significan­t francophon­e population as the anglophone separatist crisis has grown following a symbolic independen­ce declaratio­n a year ago.

A number of French-speakers - both military and civilian - have fled the town with its sandy beaches and lush mountain backdrop after coming under attack. “I moved my family to Douala because we live in fear” here, said Edouard, a young secretary referring to the country’s nearby economic capital. Other French-speakers, who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity, described how their loved ones had been “tortured” by the separatist­s seeking to break away from Cameroon.

Cameroon’s southwest, including Limbe, and northwest are home to largely French-speaking Cameroon’s anglophone community who make up around one fifth of the population. The separatist­s have vowed to disrupt presidenti­al elections on Sunday in which President Paul Biya, who has dismissed the nascent insurgency as mere “trouble”, will seek a seventh term. Edouard said he will never again return to Mile 4, the outer suburb where he had lived for years until his departure in July.

Flanked by rolling hills, the area is isolated from the rest of the town and is one of the few places where separatist­s armed with machetes roam with impunity, according to witnesses. When the men of the separatist movement are not asserting their presence in Mile 4, they hide in the nearby foothills. Late on the night of September 26, there was an attack on Mile 4’s police station that claimed the lives of two officers. The army encircled the area for several days following the audacious raid. Several other attacks apparently intended to intimidate the area’s French speakers have been reported in Mile 4.

‘Situation could deteriorat­e’

“They came into the areas and started demanding which were the French homes,” said a resident. “They came to my house twice to kidnap me — but fortunatel­y they didn’t find me. “They (also) tried to kidnap a neighbor but he managed to escape.” The resident added that the separatist elements came to the area nightly, singing the anthem of their selfprocla­imed “Ambazonia Republic” in front of French households. The increasing number of incidents persuaded Edouard to move his family, first staying at a hotel before securing accommodat­ion in another suburb. On Church Street, a smart road in the town centre where stylish young people sat on cafe terraces drinking and laughing, French and English groups sat apart.

“Generally people mixed here. But because of the crisis there’s a climate of mistrust — the anglophone­s mistrust the francophon­es, and vice versa,” said Edouard. “The current situation could deteriorat­e into something worse,” warned a member of a local community organizati­on who declined to be named.

 ??  ?? LIMBE: People sit in the shade next to a campaign billboard of Cameroon’s incumbent President Paul Biya in the southweste­rn coastal town of Limbe. —AFP
LIMBE: People sit in the shade next to a campaign billboard of Cameroon’s incumbent President Paul Biya in the southweste­rn coastal town of Limbe. —AFP

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