Cameroon security forces free 18 hostages


FE Team | Published: April 05, 2018 12:36:13 | Updated: April 06, 2018 22:51:18


Tourists, who were held hostage, sit after they were freed in Yaounde, Cameroon April 3, 2018 in this picture taken from video. Reuters.

Twelve Europeans and six Cameroonians, who were seized by ‘secessionist terrorists’ in south-western Cameroon, have been freed in a military operation, a government statement said.

It occurred in a restive English-speaking region where protesters say they are marginalised by the country’s Francophone majority.

The government said the seven Swiss and five Italians were on their way to a tourist site when they were abducted.

In recent months separatists in Cameroon’s two mainly English-speaking areas - the North-West and South-West regions - have been demanding independence, says a BBC report.

No group has come out to say it had carried out the abduction but it comes a month after a Tunisian engineer was killed by his captors in the same region.

However, a group linked to the main Anglophone secessionist group - the Ambazonian Defence Force (ADF), which has been battling security forces, has denied that it had taken part in the abduction, news agency Reuters reports.

It quotes Cho Ayaba, a leader of the Ambazonian Governing Council, as saying: “ADF does not take hostages. ADF arrest enablers and collaborators and does not arrest foreign nationals.”

The recent unrest in the English-speaking region sprang from months of clashes between residents and security forces over what residents say is marginalisation by the French majority.

Educators and lawyers in the English-speaking regions have been opposed to the employment of teachers who only speak French in technical schools. Lawyers are also opposed to the use of French in court sessions.

President Paul Biya’s hard stance has been met by calls for secessions with proponents calling for the creation of an independent state called Ambazonia.

Cameroon was colonised by Germany and then split into British and French areas after World War One.

Following a referendum, British-run Southern Cameroons joined the French-speaking Republic of Cameroon in 1961, while Northern Cameroons voted to join English-speaking Nigeria.

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