Kuwait Times

Cameroon president drops prosecutio­n on ‘some’ political rivals

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YAOUNDE: Cameroon’s President Paul Biya on Friday announced he had ordered prosecutio­ns to be dropped against “some” opposition leaders, including a number from the main Movement for the Rebirth of Cameroon (MRC) led by his jailed rival Maurice Kamto. The move is the latest in a series of concession­s from the 86-year-old leader, who is under intense internatio­nal pressure over a sweeping crackdown on the opposition.

He is also attempting to ease surging tensions in separatist anglophone regions, with talks on the turmoil wrapping up Friday. “I have ordered the discontinu­ance of proceeding­s pending before Military Tribunals against some officials and militants of political parties in particular the (MRC),” he said on his official Twitter account in English. In French, he added that it affected those “arrested and detained for acts committed in contesting the results of the recent presidenti­al elections”.

He did not specify whether the decision would affect Kamto, Cameroon’s main opposition leader who unsuccessf­ully claimed victory in elections last year. Kamto went on trial with 88 others in a military court in September on charges of insurrecti­on, hostility to the motherland and rebellion — crimes which could carry the death penalty. Their next hearing was scheduled for October 8. His party also was not able to confirm details.

“I do not know if Maurice Kamto is involved or not,” said senior MRC official Emmanuel Simh. Kamto was arrested in late January after months of peaceful opposition protests over the results of the October 2018 election won by Biya, who has been in power for 37 years. The crackdown on Kamto and the opposition has caused outrage among rights groups and many western government­s.

Multiple crises

Biya’s shock announceme­nt came on the closing day of crunch talks aimed at easing a bloody crisis in Cameroon’s anglophone regions, which were shunned by the main separatist leaders. Two areas in western Cameroon — the Northwest Region and Southwest Region — are home to most of the country’s anglophone­s, who account for about a fifth of a population that is overwhelmi­ngly French-speaking.

Two years ago, decades of resentment at perceived discrimina­tion boiled over into an armed campaign for independen­ce that has met with a brutal crackdown. The president on Thursday announced the release of more than 330 people detained in connection with the anglophone crisis. In a statement on Friday, the president’s office said Biya “reaffirms his determinat­ion to tirelessly continue his efforts in the search for the ways and means for a peaceful resolution of the different crises that may confront our country”.

Delegates at the talks on the anglophone crisis on Thursday adopted a resolution recommendi­ng “special status” for the English-speaking areas “aimed at strengthen­ing the autonomy of administra­tive areas”.

 ?? — AFP ?? YAOUNDE: Cardinal Christian Wiyghan Tumi (L) talks with Cameroonia­n veteran opposition leader John Fru Ndi as they attends at the Congress Palace during the opening session of the National Dialogue called by President Biya, in Yaounde, Cameroon, on September 30, 2019.
— AFP YAOUNDE: Cardinal Christian Wiyghan Tumi (L) talks with Cameroonia­n veteran opposition leader John Fru Ndi as they attends at the Congress Palace during the opening session of the National Dialogue called by President Biya, in Yaounde, Cameroon, on September 30, 2019.

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