Santa Fe New Mexican

Officials: Cameroon students released

- By Dionne Searcey

DAKAR, Senegal — Dozens of students kidnapped from a boarding school in a restive region of Cameroon were freed late Tuesday after being held hostage for about two days, according to local and military officials.

The circumstan­ces of the mass kidnapping were mired in confusion, but more than 70 teenage students were dropped off at the campus of their Presbyteri­an Secondary School by masked men around 11 p.m., said Samuel Fonki, a pastor in Bamenda who works with the school.

He added that no ransom had been paid for the release of the children, who were taken sometime Sunday or Monday from their campus in Nkwen, a small village outside Bamenda, where separatist­s are waging a violent battle for independen­ce from Cameroon.

Fonki said the students all appeared healthy and were immediatel­y taken to security forces for questionin­g.

He said a teacher and a principal were still being held captive, but military officials indicated that all hostages were freed.

It remains unclear who abducted the hostages, but the military said they had been abandoned by their captors after the area was sealed off by soldiers.

The area where the kidnapping­s occurred is one of two English-speaking regions in the country where various factions of separatist­s want to form their own nation, Ambazonia.

The decadeslon­g quest for secession turned violent about a year ago, after government soldiers opened fire on unarmed protesters.

Separatist­s say they are fighting to overturn years of poor representa­tion in the government, which is centered in the French-speaking capital. The dual official languages are a remnant of a complicate­d colonial past in which both France and Britain imposed their own cultures on the regions.

President Paul Biya has been in power for 36 years, centralizi­ng authority with loyalists in the capital, and he was sworn in for his seventh term in power Tuesday.

The military’s response to the separatist­s has been heavily criticized by human rights advocates.

Separatist­s accused the government of orchestrat­ing the kidnapping in an effort to turn people against them, a charge that government officials denied. At least one major faction of separatist­s condemned the kidnapping­s.

Boko Haram, the Islamist extremist group operating hundreds of miles to the north in border areas with Nigeria, has used mass kidnapping­s of students as a tactic to terrorize the population, but it is not suspected of being behind the Presbyteri­an school kidnapping­s in Cameroon.

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