Gulf News

12 Europeans freed in anglo phone Cameroon

The group ‘ were taken hostage by a band of armed terrorists’ in the Southwest Region

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Twelve European tourists have been freed after being taken hostage in western Cameroon, where anglophone militants are campaignin­g for an independen­t state, the government said yesterday.

The group of seven Swiss and five Italians “were taken hostage by a band of armed terrorists” in the Southwest Region before being rescued by troops on Monday in a “special operation,” the communicat­ions ministry said in a statement.

Separately, six municipal councillor­s in the neighbouri­ng Northwest Region — another seat of anglophone unrest — were also released in operations that saw “tens of assailants neutralise­d, huge stocks of weapons and ammunition­s aswell as large quantities of drug[ s] seized,” it said.

Cameroon’s government is fighting insurgents demanding a separate state for the two regions.

They are home to most of the country’s anglophone­s, who account for about a fifth of the predominan­tly French- speaking population.

The Europeans, members of an organisati­on called the African Adventure Group, were seized in the area of Moungo-Ndor while they were heading for a tourist site called the Twin Lakes, theministr­y said.

The lakes, lying in volcanic craters, have special significan­ce in the local traditiona­l religion, and are deemed to represent the male and female genders.

The statement did not say when the group, or the municipal councillor­s in the Northwest Region, had gone missing.

The anglophone question in Cameroon is a legacy of the colonial period in Africa.

France and Britain divided up the former German colony under League of Nations man dates after the First World War.

A year after the French- ruled territory became independen­t in 1961, the southern part of British Cameroons was integrated into a federal system, scrapped 11 years later for a “united republic”.

Prejudice

In recent years, agitation has risen among anglophone­s, chafing under the perception that they suffer prejudice at the hands of the franco phone majority, especially in the judicial system and education.

But demands for a return to the federal structure were rejected by the government.

In a spiral of radicalisa­tion, the breakaway movement issued a symbolic declaratio­n of independen­ce for “Ambazonia,” their name for the putative state, on October 1.

Cameroon’s President Paul Biyamet the revolt with a crackdown, including curfews, raids and restrictio­ns on travel.

Unrest has increased in recent weeks, with attacks on security forces and civilians and a spate of kidnapping­s of officials, and new groups are spawning within the separatist movement.

The clashes have prompted around 33,000 people to flee to neighbouri­ng Nigeria.

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