Kuwait Times

Cameroon votes in presidenti­al polls as conflict rages

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YAOUNDE: Cameroonia­ns voted in presidenti­al polls yesterday with octogenari­an leader Paul Biya seeking a seventh term against a backdrop of deadly 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 various other opposition parties to create a “super-coalition” to deny Biya another seven years were apparently fruitless.

Biya and his wife Chantal, who wore a matching canary yellow skirt, jacket and handbag along with her signature brown bouffant hair, voted in the Bastos public school in the capital Yaounde surrounded by heavily-armed soldiers. “The election campaign was conducted peacefully... as president, it would be satisfying to be reelected to see that the people trust me,” he told journalist­s as he left the voting booth and returned to his MercedesMa­ybach limousine. “I feel proud,” said Patrick, 38, an airport worker who also voted in Bastos.

“I want the next president to consolidat­e what we have achieved in Cameroon. I want the elections to pass off peacefully, that’s my only hope for the polls.” Cameroon’s 6.5 million eligible voters are casting their ballots as violence rages in the anglophone southwest and northwest. Those regions have been rocked by a separatist insurgency launched a year ago

against the mainly francophon­e state. The violence has killed 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.

After voting got underway yesterday, security forces shot dead three suspected separatist­s who had allegedly been firing at passersby from a motorcycle in Bamenda, the main city in the northwest region, a local official said. In Buea, capital of the southwest, three separatist­s of the so-called Ambazonia Republic were gunned down on Friday and 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 US efforts to equip and train Cameroon’s military to battle the jihadists.

‘Massive fraud’?

In a rare coordinate­d political manoeuvre, a key opposition frontrunne­r, Maurice Kamto, agreed late 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 for both parties. However it is unclear whether the eleventh-hour deal will sway the vote, which runs until 1700 GMT. “This alliance, though interestin­g for the vitality of Cameroonia­n democracy, may have arrived too late,” said Hans de Marie Heungoup, an ICG researcher.

Kamto’s MRC has warned that a “massive fraud” is underway to secure a Biya win. “We’re not preparing for war, but wherever there is fraud, there will be a firm response,” said MRC spokesman Paul-Eric Kingue. 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 supporting Biya. But despite the ubiquity of Biya’s posters, he has been virtually absent from the campaign trail, except for a single event last weekend.

Travel lock-down

It is unclear if polling will proceed normally across Cameroon’s Englishspe­aking 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 received a military escort as they travelled to the outskirts of Buea yesterday, according to AFP journalist­s. The government said it was possible there were “troublemak­ers” in the anglophone regions.

“But the vast majority of residents are ready and willing to vote,” said Communicat­ions Minister Issa Tchiroma Bakary. Authoritie­s have imposed a raft of security measures including a ban on inter-regional travel and sealing the borders. 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 vote, which could favor Biya as anglophone­s have traditiona­lly backed the Social Democratic Front (SDF) party of rival candidate Joshua Osih. Results must be posted within 15 calendar days of the poll. —AFP

 ??  ?? YAOUNDE: Cameroon’s incumbent President Paul Biya and his wife Chantal arrive at a polling station to vote in the Bastos neighborho­od of Yaounde yesterday during Cameroon’s presidenti­al election. —AFP
YAOUNDE: Cameroon’s incumbent President Paul Biya and his wife Chantal arrive at a polling station to vote in the Bastos neighborho­od of Yaounde yesterday during Cameroon’s presidenti­al election. —AFP

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