Gulf News

Nigeria detains Cameroon separatist

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Aleading member of a separatist movement in Cameroon has been taken into custody in the capital of neighbouri­ng Nigeria with his aides, sources and secessioni­sts said on Saturday.

The once-fringe Anglophone movement in majority Francophon­e Cameroon has gathered pace in the last few months following a military crackdown on protests. It represents the gravest challenge yet to the 35-year rule of President Paul Biya who will seek re-election this year.

Julius Ayuk Tabe, the Nigeria-based chairman of the Governing Council of Ambazonia separatist movement, was taken into custody alongside six others at a hotel in Abuja on Friday, said an official in the West African country and a member of the separatist group in Cameroon.

Relations strained

Bilateral relations have been strained by a separatist movement in Cameroon that has clashed with the Cameroonia­n army and forced thousands to flee violence by travelling across the border to Nigeria.

Cameroonia­n troops last month crossed into Nigeria in pursuit of rebels without seeking Nigerian authorisat­ion, causing diplomatic wrangling behind the scenes.

Separatist­s, including armed radical elements, seek an independen­t state for the nation’s Anglophone regions they call Ambazonia.

A Nigerian official said Tabe and six of his supporters were placed in custody at around 7pm (1800 GMT) on Friday. “They were having a meeting at Nera Hotels in Abuja,” the official said on condition of anonymity.

The official did not know who rounded up the separatist­s. A member of the separatist group based in Cameroon, who wanted to remain anonymous, said the people were taken into custody. The group later issued a statement saying Tabe and six others were taken from Nera Hotels by Cameroonia­n gunmen in an “illegal abduction.”

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