Bullet wounds and little aid for Cameroonians fleeing Anglophone conflict

More than 200,000 people have fled their homes in the volatile western regions since late last year as a predominantly French-speaking dominated Cameroon government cracks down on restive English speaking regions

Cameroon has been gripped by violence since protests by the mainly Francophone country's Anglophone minority morphed into a secessionist movement last year
Reuters

Cameroon has been gripped by violence since protests by the mainly Francophone country's Anglophone minority morphed into a secessionist movement last year

Cameroonians fleeing an increasingly bloody separatist conflict have received little aid as humanitarian agencies struggle to access the area.

More than 200,000 people have fled their homes in the volatile western regions since late last year, in addition to at least 21,000 who have fled into Nigeria, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) say.

The regions have been gripped by violence since protests by the mainly Francophone country's Anglophone minority morphed into a secessionist movement last year.

There were no humanitarian agencies in the area before the insurgency, and bad roads, travel restrictions and unpredictable attacks have made it difficult for them to go in, said Modibo Traore, the head of OCHA in Cameroon.

Activist Farida Nabourema speaks to TRT World about the unfolding crisis in Cameroon and other African states.

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Most of the people who have fled clashes are hiding in the woods, he said. Some have bullet wounds but are afraid to venture into urban areas for medical care.

"The people living in the forest are asking for more assistance, saying that conditions are very difficult," Traore told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"They are sleeping in the open space... in the middle of the rainy season. Many people couldn't take anything with them."

OCHA released an emergency response plan in May calling for $15 million to provide food, shelter and other necessities to the displaced, but has received no donations so far, he said.

Medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres began to set up mobile clinics this month in the southwest region, it said in a statement. The people it treated were lacking adequate shelter, drinking water and food, it said.

Cameroonian authorities could not immediately be reached for comment. The government published its own humanitarian assistance plan last month, and it was not clear whether aid delivery had begun.

"Because media access... is very limited, we don't have a full grasp of the kind of suffering that people are actually going through," said Elizabeth Mpimbaza, a spokeswoman for the U.N. refugee agency in Nigeria.

Those who fled across the border have also received little humanitarian aid, and are surviving because poor local communities are sharing what they have, Mpimbaza said.

Analysts fear violence could increase ahead of an October election in which President Paul Biya is aiming to extend his 36-year rule.

"I am very worried about the situation," said Traore of OCHA. "Unfortunately we are not expecting any improvement anytime soon."

Biya announced earlier this monthst that he would run for re-election in October, aiming to extend his 36-year rule and maintain his place on a shortening roster of long-standing African leaders.

Biya, who came to power in 1982 when his predecessor retired, is seeking a seventh term in office that could see the 85-year-old rule well into his 90s.

It would leave him in rare company after former Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe and Gambia's Yahya Jammeh were ousted in 2017. Of Africa's living rulers, only Equatorial Guinea's President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo has ruled uninterrupted for longer.

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