Kilimanjaro Radio fetes 10 years

DIASPORA DIARIES

On October 28, 2023 Africans in and around Toronto met to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the best Afro radio in North America.

Kilimanjaro Radio Toronto started as an online radio some 10 years ago with live programs.

This was made possible through seasoned media anchors located in Europe, US, Canada, etc.

This year’s celebration brought together African artists, some of whom grabbed the Kilimanjaro Music Awards in different categories.

Kilimanjaro Radio Toronto is the brain work of Mr Christian Romeo, one of the best program animators in modern times. Christian Romeo is a Canadian Cameroonian.

The 10th anniversary was a milestone for this radio which has continued to support African artists and the African media as a whole. You can get Kilimanjaro radio on tune in app for all your African musical pleasures.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

Outcry as Camtel splashes millions on foreign Artiste

Bikutsi Queen, Lady Ponce, expressed her dissatisfaction with the management of Cameroon Telecommunication company, CAMTEL, for ignoring local Artistes in the launch of a new product.

Congolese-born, Fally Ipupa, is expected to perform during the unveiling of the new product on December 30, 2023, at the Douala Reunification Stadium.

Lady Ponce said such a position could have been occupied by Cameroonian Makossa legend, Petit Pays.

“Cameroon Télécommunications, you launch a product consumed by Cameroonians, yet you’re a taxpayer-owned company, but you take Fally as your headliner and he’s the one you put as your headliner.” she wondered.

“Camtel, what a shame, what contempt! Our companies have no respect for Cameroonian Artistes.”

The Bitkussi Queen revealed that CAMTEL did not respond to her sponsorship requests when she organized a show at the Yaounde Sports Complex, “I asked for your sponsorship for Paposy. You haven’t given a penny, you don’t support anyone, any artist from your country, this can’t exist in any country in Africa.”

“Instead of covering the national network, you spend your money inviting foreign artists.

I’m in Douala, and it’s been 3 months since I bought a CAMTEL (Cameroon Telecommunications) chip, which is not being used anywhere, let alone at home,” a Facebook user commented under CAMTEL’s post announcing the arrival of the Congolese musician in December.

Another person said, “Petit Pays as a headliner… or other local Artistes would be better…and that would really convey the meaning of consuming Cameroonian.”

CNA cannot confirm information that CAMTEL will spend a whooping FCFA 50 million to pay Fally Ipupa, excluding other expenses.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

Manyu: More than 30 die in Amba attack

More than 30 civilians were killed early Monday in Egbekaw village, Manyu Division.

Two days ago on November 4, 2023, a separatist fighter in Egbekaw village in Mamfe, Manyu Division of the South West, was killed allegedly by men from neighboring Nigeria, hired to secure the area ( The Boki community that lives in Egbekaw village spread across the boundary between Nigeria and Cameroon. Those around Cameroon living in Egbekaw are said to have invited men across the borders to protect them from separatist activities) according to information Cameroon News Agency gathered.

Mamfe, is the chief town of Manyu Division. Since 2016, one of the worst incidents that have occurred in the Seven-year-old armed conflict in the Anglophone regions, has taken place in Mamfe. This includes the murder of Mayor Ashu Mamfe Mayor Killed, Two Soldiers Injured In Eshobi – Cameroon News Agency in 2020. Individuals have been using the situation to settle scores while communities are said to have armed themselves against invading forces.

The Boki Community living in Egbekaw had left Akwaya, another popular town in the Manyu division. They settled there for the past years due to the armed conflict. But during the past week, they allegedly hired mercenaries from Nigeria to hunt down Ambazonia separatists who are said to give them nightmares in Egbekaw.

Cameroon News Agency’s correspondent who spoke with witnesses said, the separatist fighter was shot in the head and buried in the Egbekaw village on Sunday.

His colleagues vowed that they were going to retaliate, a Quarter head revealed to CNA.

“The Amba ( referring to separatists) from Mamfe promised hell on the Boki people and equally warned anyone who is housing any Boki indigene in their areas that they are going to come for them,” a source said.

CNA also heard from witnesses that the people of Egbekaw were also warned to send away all people from Boki from their houses, or else they were going to attack them. Security forces were alerted but they ignored the warnings.

“The shooting that lasted for about two hours was without any military intervention,” a CNA reporter said.

Houses, shops, and hospitals were vandalized before setting them ablaze. “They used petrol and burned people in their sleep. This morning we are just realising that many houses were burned and some corpses are still being counted”

A CNA findings revealed that Ambazonia forces called Tigers of Manyu carried out the attack. Findings also show that the houses burned were targetted, “They knew the houses very well, that is why most of those who died are from Boki”

Source: Cameroon News Agency

EDITORIAL – Biya’s 41 Years in power: nothing to write home about

Today marks 41 years of Biya’s presidency – the second-longest serving head of state in Africa. Mr. Biya took over the reins on 6th November 1982 after Cameroon’s first president , Ahmadou Ahidjo, announced his resignation, taking the nation rather aback.

More than 40 years later, almost half of Cameroon’s population – a large majority of them under 25 – have never known any other president except Mr. Biya.

Biya’s presidency was founded on the motto of rigour and moralization and there was great hope and anticipation when the young, buoyant leader took over office. His good looks were just an icing on the cake.

But as the decades wore on, the charm quickly faded away, revealing Mr. Biya’s true character, one in which dissent was only tolerated in rhetoric but never in practice. His opponents often got thrown into jail and those vying for the presidency – his most prized possession – often end up behind bars.

Biya often seems to want to solve problems but in fact only serves his cronies. At the start of the current phase of the Anglophone Crisis in 2017, Mr. Biya instead of giving in to the demands of the newly created Cameroon Anglophone Civil Society Consortium (CACSC), he chose to create a commission for the promotion of bilingualism and multiculturalism. The move was castigated by separatists and the wider Anglophone public as not being representative of their interests.

As we write this, a bloody massacre has just taken place in a village near Mamfe, leading to the death of more than 20 people alleged to be separatists. There is a cry in Mamfe that has become sadly all too familiar to Anglophones, while Biya’s supporters gulp down glasses of champagne and dance rhythmically to makossa tunes. They have called for the 90-year-old to run for another 7-year term in 2025 when Biya would be nearly 93.

Sometimes one is prone to wonder whether these people who claim to love Mr. Biya, actually live in the same Cameroon or are they just so evil and don’t care for this country because the rigorous and moral thing to do would be to ask Mr. Biya to step aside now. He should give Cameroonians a chance at trying another hand. Cameroonians have come to simply accept that Mr. Biya is their ate, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they are content with the status quo. Cameroonians want better roads which even in the capital city Yaounde, are in a deplorable state. Jobs are scarce and when they do become available, they tend to be reserved for those from particular tribes or political affiliations. The press is also stifled and even penning a piece like this means you keep walking and looking over your shoulder.

Health facilities are in a state of dilapidation and doctors in public hospitals are known to demand up front payment before attending even to patients in critical condition. The case of Monique Koumateke who lost her life in front of the Laquantinie Hospital in Douala in 2016 during Andre Mama Fouda’s tenure as health minister – is all too fresh in the minds of Cameroonians. Koumateke was denied access to the hospital even though she was heavily pregnant with twins. Her sister in a desperate measure, slit her stomach open with a razor blade in an attempt to “deliver” the twins but they too like their mother, were dead. Mama Fouda issued a statement claiming that Koumateke had died before reaching the hospital even though Mr. Fouda was miles away in his office in Yaounde.

During President Biya’s 41 years in power, he has been described by the BBC as “Cameroon’s absentee president” due to his long stays out of the country, mostly in Europe where he is accused of spending huge sums of money in luxury hotels while ordinary Cameroonians die from poor health, bad roads, corrupt practices in almost all spheres of Cameroonian public life which all thrive under Biya’s watch.

So while ordinary Anglophone Cameroonians continue to suffer from abuses by both military forces and separatist fighters, Mr. Biya’s response has been to almost give the military a carte blanche to keep razing villages and killing even those just suspected of being or collaborating with separatist fighters – all this with flagrant impunity.

So while some may sing his praises and say how it is not easy to lead people for 41 years (as if the elections have not been repeatedly rigged), we see nothing worthy of celebrating. After Biya leaves the scene, what legacy would he leave behind? What would be there to celebrate?

The answer is blowing in the wind.

Source: Cameroon News Agency