Cameroon goes to the polls as conflict rages on
85-year-old Paul Biya seeks 7th term in office
YAOUNDE: Cameroonians began voting in crunch presidential polls yesterday, with octogenarian leader Paul Biya seeking a seventh term against a backdrop of unprecedented violence in the country’s English-speaking regions.
The vote follows a last-minute opposition unity bid to dislodge the 85-year-old incumbent, one of Africa’s longest-serving rulers.
Two leading opponents have formed the first electoral union since 1992, but talks between the array of other opposition parties to create a “super-coalition” to deny Mr Biya another seven years were apparently unsuccessful.
In the Bastos public school in the capital Yaounde, where Mr Biya will cast his vote later, brisk voting got underway as soon as the polls opened.
“I’ve come early to avoid queues... I’ve done my civic duty, now we wait for the results,” Joelle, a 51-year-old housewife, said after being the second person to vote.
Voters in the queue were watched by a heavy security presence including members of the presidential guard, deployed ahead of Mr Biya’s arrival.
Cameroon’s 6.5 million eligible voters are casting their ballots as the toll continues to mount in the anglophone southwest and northwest, which have been rocked by a separatist insurgency launched a year ago against the mainly francophone state.
The violence has claimed the lives of at least 420 civilians, 175 members of the security forces and an unknown number of separatists, according to the International Crisis Group (ICG) think-tank.
In Buea, capital of the southwest, three separatists of the so-called Ambazonia Republic were gunned down on Friday while a priest was executed by soldiers on Thursday, according to witnesses.
The far north is also mired in insecurity, as Nigeria-based Boko Haram fighters mount attacks despite efforts by the US to equip and train Cameroon’s military to battle the jihadists.
In a rare coordinated political manoeuvre, one of the key opposition frontrunners, Maurice Kamto, agreed late on Friday to a unity deal between his Movement for the Rebirth of Cameroon (MRC) and the People’s Development Front (FDP), meaning he will stand on behalf of both parties.
It is the first such tactical pre-election tie-up since John Fru Ndi stood as the sole opposition candidate in 1992 in polls that his supporters claimed he won but allege were manipulated in order to hand victory to Mr Biya.
But it is unclear whether the eleventhhour deal was done in time to affect the
vote, which was to run up until 6pm local time yesterday.
“This alliance, though interesting for the vitality of Cameroonian democracy, may have arrived too late,” said Hans de Marie Heungoup, an ICG researcher.
Mr Kamto’s MRC has warned that a “massive fraud” has been put in motion to secure a win for Mr Biya.
“We’re not preparing for war, but wherever there is fraud, there will be a firm response,” said MRC spokesman Paul-Eric Kingue.
But the government hit back, apparently in response to the MRC, saying that it would “not tolerate any disorder before, during or after the presidential vote”.
The opposition has long accused the authorities of working to re-elect the president, pointing to his party’s slick rallies, social media campaigns and the massive distribution of Biya-branded merchandise to the public.
But despite the ubiquity of Mr Biya’s posters across Cameroon, he has been virtually invisible during the campaign except for a single event last weekend.
It is unclear if polling will proceed normally across Cameroon’s English-speaking regions where separatists hold a “significant” amount of territory, according to the ICG, and have threatened to disrupt the vote.
A team of election officials were under military escort as they travelled to the outskirts of Buea yesterday according to journalists.
In a bid to limit disruption to the polls, authorities have imposed stringent security measures including the suspension of all inter-regional road, rail and air travel.
International borders were also due to be sealed.
A total of 246,000 people have fled their homes in the southwest and 25,000 have left the country altogether for Nigeria, according to UN figures.
It is thought that the displaced will struggle to cast ballots which could favour Mr Biya as anglophones have traditionally backed the Social Democratic Front (SDF) party of candidate Joshua Osih.
Results must be posted within 15 calendar days of the poll.