Gambian prison officers tell Swiss trial of torture in jails under dictator Jammeh


Two Gambian prison officers-Lamin Sanneh and Abdou Jammeh-Monday testified to torture, and poor food and hygiene conditions at Gambia’s central prison- Mile 2-in the crimes against humanity trial of Gambia’s former Interior Minister Ousman Sonko.

Sonko served as police chief under ex-President Yahya Jammeh from 2005 to 2006. In the latter part of 2006, he was appointed minister of the interior, a position he held until 2016.

The Swiss Attorney General’s office, along with 10 plaintiffs from the Gambia, is accusing Sonko of torture, murder, false imprisonment, rape, and deprivation of liberty, allegedly perpetrated against Gambians during the 22-year rule of Gambia’s former dictator Jammeh. Sonko was arrested and charged with crimes against humanity here in Switzerland in 2017 after he sought asylum.

Swiss prosecutors are trying to prove Sonko’s responsibility for torture through his participation in various investigation panels as inspector general or for ordering or abetting abuse as minister of the inte
rior.

Earlier testimonies before the court alleged that Sonko served on the investigation panel following the 2006 foiled coup, which oversaw the torture and interrogation of witnesses by Junglers-a paramilitary hit squad operating under the orders of Jammeh.

On Monday, the trial’s fifth witness, Lamin Sanneh, a prison officer, told the three-member panel of judges that in 2012 torture was widespread in Mile 2, the country’s central prison Jammeh called his ‘five-star’ hotel.

‘Most of the time, the Junglers come there and take inmates to the [National Intelligence Agency], and when they return them, you know that these inmates have gone through something,’ said Sanneh. ‘Some inmates are tortured while they are being taken away. I experienced that also. It is very terrible.’

Ousman’s knowledge of abuse

Sanneh was the personal bodyguard of David Colley, the longtime former director of Gambia’s Prison Services, the institution overseeing Gambian prisons, including Mile 2.

Sonko denied wrongdoing and argued
that he neither exercised administrative nor operational oversight over the prisons. Sonko said that the Security Wing of Mile 2-a barely two-metre square cell with a face-size window tucked near the roof, was often under the control of the military.

‘David Colley has operational and administrative responsibility over prison services and all the prisons in the Gambia. As such, he does not need instructions from me,’ said Sonko in the Monday hearings before the Swiss court. However, Sanneh testified that Sonko and Colley enjoyed a close working relationship and that he had full knowledge of events in the prisons, including Mile 2.

‘Whatever happens at the prison, the director [David Colley] will feed [Sonko],’ with information, said Sanneh. ‘I know the Director will not do anything without the notice of the Minister. Anything going on in the prison, he has to inform him.’

Abdou Jammeh, another prison officer who was arrested in 2016 and held without charge for nine months, shared a similar testimony.

Murde
r of Baba Jobe

Among the series of allegations Sonko is battling in Switzerland is his alleged involvement in the 2012 murder of Baba Jobe, the former majority leader of Jammeh’s APRC’s party.

Jobe was sentenced to a nine-year jail term in 2004 on charges of economic crimes. Barely a year before he was due to be released, Junglers allegedly walked into his room and suffocated him with a pillow, Omar Jallow, a Jungler, testified before the Truth Commission in 2019.

That day, Sanneh said he was asked to guard Colley, who was in the hospital. Colley informed him that military officials were coming for Jobe, and when they came, he should grant them access, he told the court.

In 2018, David Colley told Swiss prosecutors that he got a call from Sonko to grant Jungler Nuha Badgie access to Jobe. Sonko contested Colley’s claim and denied any involvement in the planning and execution of Jobe.

The trial is expected to last until January 30, but the verdict will likely be announced in March. If found guilty, Sonko
could face up to 20 years in prison. The trial continues Tuesday.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Kouoptamo: Clashes between locals, security forces leave at least 2 dead

By Stephen TADAHA

At least 2 people have lost their lives and others injured on January 15, 2024 following a clash which erupted between the local population and security forces in Kouoptamo, a locality in the Noun division of the West region of Cameroon due to a land dispute.

According to local sources, the population had gathered at the gendarmerie unit of the locality and at the council to demand the release of a person who had been detained following a land dispute.

The said land had been long abandoned by colonial masters and the locals had been demanding that it be officially given back to them. They also declared that they have been denouncing the illegal occupation of the land by some individuals.

Sources on the ground say Military elements were deployed for the matter and they are the ones noe accused of shooting on the angry population with real bullets resulting in the deaths of at least 2 people.

The mortal remains of one of the victims, a local artist whose name we got as Mimba Junior, were
carried to the Bamoun royal palace where locals expressed their disappointment at the way the matter is being handled by authorities.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

Teacher arrested for impersonating Akan MP


The Jasikan Municipal Police Command in the Oti Region has arrested Bless Agbenyenu, a teacher, for allegedly impersonating Mr Yao Gomado, the Member of Parliament (MP) for Akan Constituency.

The suspect, arrested on Monday, January 15, was said to have created a Facebook account and named it after the legislator.

Mr Emmanuel Klu, a Personal Assistant to the MP, when contacted by the Ghana News Agency (GNA), said five victims had written their witness statements.

He said more victims from Asato and Dodo-Amanfrom communities in the Kadjebi District, would visit the Police Station on Tuesday, January 16, to give their statements.

A press release signed by Mr Musah Mohammed, the Deputy Communications Officer, National Democratic Congress (NDC), Akan Constituency, said the impersonation scheme involved the unauthorised use of Mr Gomado’s identity on social media, especially on Facebook.

‘The imposter exploited this false identity to engage in deceitful activities, causing harm and potential financial loss t
o unsuspecting individuals,’ it said.

‘Local authorities are urging anyone who may have fallen victim to this fraudulent scheme to come forward and report their experiences to the Police.’

The release reminded the public to exercise caution and verify the authenticity of online interactions, especially when dealing with sensitive matters on financial transactions.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Douala: mother, daughter detained for allegedly dumping baby in stream

A lady has been arrested in the PK8 neighborhood in Douala for allegedly throwing her one-day-old baby in a stream on January 13, 2024.

Investigations led to the arrest of the newborn’s grandmother who allegedly encouraged her daughter to commit the act which led to the drowning of the baby.

‘The baby was put in a bag and covered with clothes. The lady proceeded to throw the bag into the stream and quietly left. No one could suspect it was a baby. It was the next day that I went in and searched the content of the bag before discovering the baby who had suffocated and died,’ explained a local inhabitant.

When the news went viral, the population stormed the residence of the lady with the dead baby. Alerted, forces of law and order arrived the scene and arrested the accused women.

The baby’s remains have been buried.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

More than 100 judgements not enforced – ECOWAS Court


Approximately 131 judgements out of over 400 judgements delivered by the ECOWAS Community Court of Justice (CCJ) have not been enforced.

The Court said there were so many challenges that were preventing the enforcement of its judgements.

Ms. Oluwatosin Nguher, Senior Research Officer at CCJ, speaking at a sensitisation event for law students at the University of Ghana said there was a lack of political will by member states to enforce these judgments.

The sensitisation formed part of the sustained efforts by the Court to engage with the stakeholders with the specific objective of closing the yawning gap in the knowledge of the Court by Community citizens, including critical stakeholders.

The students and participants were taken through the overview of the CCJ, practices and procedures of the court, including the filing of cases and representation, human rights, and the court’s jurisdiction.

She said the Court as the primary judicial organ of ECOWAS with the mandate to dispense justice in the protection
of human rights has a non-peculiar challenge of enforcement of its judgements.

‘This is largely because enforcement power is vetted in Member States and not the Court,’ she said.

She said Member States and other stakeholders like lawyers, NGOs, Judges and Community Citizens must hold Member States accountable to their international Obligations.

Ms Nguher said the ECOWAS court was not in conflict with the domestic courts rather their relationship was complimentary.

The Senior Research Officer said there was non-involvement of human rights institutions in the enforcement of these decisions.

‘Non-ratification and domestication of protocols of the court is a challenge,’ she added.

She said more sensitisation needed to be carried out to Member States’ judicial organ to build capacity on Community Laws and the same should be done with the legislature to enable domestication of the Community Laws.

He further stressed that low enforcement could make it difficult for citizens of ECOWAS to enjoy the full benefit
s of the court as envisioned by the ECOWAS treaty.

‘We are not talking only in terms of only Ghana, but all the member states that have outstanding judgments yet to be implemented. We are employing all member states to do the needful.

If the court does it work by delivering judgments and the judgments are not implemented, it does not give the needed efficacy to the court,’ he said.

Justice Edward Amoako Asante, the President of CCJ, said the six-day sensitization campaign was to engage with various stakeholders on various aspects of the Court.

He said during the period, the CCJ team interacted with law students, the Office of the Attorney-General and Ministry of Justice and the Ghana Bar Association.

The President said the campaign had three components, mainly media appearances, advocacy, engagement with lawyers and law students, and a stakeholder meeting with a cross-section of community citizens.

Justice Asante said the campaign had been carefully structured to ensure that all segments of the Court’s
stakeholders were targeted with appropriate information on the Court, mainly its mandate, jurisdiction, procedures before the court, the enforcement of its decisions, challenges, and relationship with the national courts of the Member States.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Another crisis threatens to rip CBC apart as search for Prof. Tih’s replacement beginsNCCE engages farmers in Kwahu East about dangers of bushfires

CNA EXCLUSIVE:

-Accuses CBC Chairman of tribalism and nepotism

-Decries un-Christian behaviour of same Chairman for blatant disregard of CBC Constitution

-Exonerates CBC Executive President as a good leader just being arm-twisted

-Praises Prof. Tih Pius for a remarkable job in healthcare, and leadership in Africa

The Cameroon Baptist Convention Held Hostage by Tribalism

The Cameroon Baptist Convention (CBC) has started the year 2024 with a leadership crisis that threatens to beat every known record of its leadership scandals. The year 2023 ended with the need to replace one of Africa’s most gifted and most performant leaders, Prof. Tih Pius. He has led the Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services Department (CBCHSD) for a record nearly three decades and has transformed it from near-nothing to the best health provider in the state of Cameroon.

It can be factually argued that the CBCHSD is the leader in health services provision by any church on the continent of Africa. Besides the several state-of-t
he-art hospitals and clinics that it runs across the nation, the CBCSD also offers a training centre in Mbingo Baptist Hospital, in partnership with Johns Hopkins University in the USA, that brings in qualified medical practitioners from around Africa for specialization in surgery and internal medicine. Though still performant, the need arose for Prof. Tih to take his retirement. As a successful leader, he had prepared for continuity through leadership succession by grooming his possible successors. That is what successful leadership is supposed to be.

Unfortunately, the Convention finds itself caught in the grip of a top leader who is silently tribalistic and nepotistic. The CBC got saddled at its top an astute politician, a retired Divisional Officer, Mr. Yosimbom John Mkong, whose primary interest is to place his village men in the top leadership positions of the Convention. His current scheming and manipulations to effect a leadership bypass in the Health Services Department are causing tempers to flare
in certain quarters of the Convention that might lead to an open tribal conflict in the Church. The focus of this article is to objectively expose what leadership that is consumed by tribalism and nepotism can do to bring down a department that is the pride of not only the CBC but the entire nation of Cameroon. If these excesses are not brought to check, it will also bring to shame the Convention that is considered by many as the moral conscience of Cameroon. In every respect, the simmering scandal that the Convention is presently going through is one of the worst leadership blunders in the African church.

It is important to observe a number of facts in the first place. First, Prof. Tih didn’t work single-handedly to develop the CBCHSD to stand at par with the state of Cameroon in providing health services. He worked with a team of leaders whom he developed for the system at every level, culminating at the top with administrators and senior administrators. The system is organized as such for productive perfo
rmance so that at any level, there is always a pool of competent personnel to draw upon to meet the system’s leadership exigencies.

Secondly, the rise of the Department is also the result of a competent Board of technocrats that meets twice a year (in June and December) to review and think out strategies for better performance. The members are experts carefully selected from within the cream of the Convention. The consistent performance of this no-nonsense Board, over the years, has smoothened the path for the growth of this Department even in tough economic times, to top all health providers in Cameroon except the state. Readers might want to know that the government of Cameroon recognizes CBC Health Services as the best provider of health services next to the state.

Thirdly, this succession scandal is taking place at a time in history when the Convention has, as Executive President (Moderator), one of its finest pastors in the person of the Right Reverend Dr. Nditemeh Charlemagne. He caught the attention
of the church and the nation when, at his inauguration in 2019, he announced his three-point mantra of office as Truth, Equity, and Development. These are virtues grossly lacking in Cameroon. As such, every eyebrow has been opened and every finger crossed to see how this unfolds in real life. It is expected that the realization of this mantra will provide hope, not only for the CBC, but also for a nation buried in hopelessness. This article will close with a review of these mantras in light of the nascent mafia in the CBC Health Services Department to demonstrate how the Chairman’s manipulations are a travesty of the Executive President’s operational principles.

Fourthly, just recently, the Executive President introduced the offices of Deputy Directors in the CBCHSD and painstakingly explained that it provided a platform for smooth succession and continuity at the helm of this key Department of the Convention. Consequently, the first and second Deputy Directors were voted into office with that understanding
heralded across the Convention. Thus far, this intended direction of leadership mutation has not raised any eyebrows. This added to the accolade of the Executive President’s competence and foresight. When all was ready for leadership change at the close of the Year 2023, many jaws dropped at the shameless manipulation of the laid-down rules by the Chairman of the Convention. Readers might also want to know that this chairmanship is a ceremonial position, though Mr. Mkong Yosimbom now wields more power, almost as much as the Executive President, than ascribed to him by the constitution of the Convention. In the present scandal, it is not fair to blame everything on the Executive President. The man behind the scandal is the Chairman himself.

Finally, the General Council (Synod) of the Convention, which is its highest decision-making body next to the General Session, is made up of Field Pastors (Parish Pastors) who are mostly men without the guts to stand up to leadership manipulations. Some of them hardly even
understand the issues that count in the Convention. It is not uncommon that decisions at this body are often arrived at through the mind and even intimidation of the Chairman of the CBC who presides at these meetings. There are surely some thinking heads in the Council. Unfortunately, they are drowned by unsuspecting and unthinking hand-clappers whose delight in being Council members is the name that goes with it. These and other members still see their Chairman as a Divisional Officer whose opinion is law.

The Mafia in the Making

When the CBC elected Mr Yosimbom John, it was widely believed that a man of principle had come into the leadership of the Convention. He is a retired civil administrator and politician who professes Christianity, and so passes for a practicing Christian politician. From every indication, he is a believer. Unfortunately, he is not, in the practice of leadership, the principled-oriented and objective leader that he parades himself to be. His tenure has been marked by tribalism and n
epotism. He is known to push for his kindreds to be employed by the Department of Health Services even if they are not qualified for the job. For reasons of probity, we withhold such instances. This notwithstanding, his tribal tendencies speak loudly. Such instances include manipulation to have his village man appointed as Vice Chancellor of the Baptist Seminary in Ndu. Who in the Convention did not know that the choice of this man as Vice Chancellor was a travesty of academic morality and justice? Secondly, a few years ago he fought like a hungry lion to secure the position of the Director of Christian and Theological Education for one of his sons. And this time around, the opportunity knocks for him to put into the top job in the Health Services Department in another village kindred. He wants to get this position, come what may, for his village man. How come we throw stones only at the Executive President?

The Chairman’s greed was so vagarious that no one expected him to blatantly present two candidates al
l from his village. This was to happen, nonetheless, since he is a member of the three-man Search Committee for the replacement of Prof. Tih Pius. The first bold act was to dismiss a member of the Committee who represents the Board of the Health Department. Barrister Sama Aloysius, who had served as Board Chair was immediately dismissed to make the path to presenting two Oku village folks, smooth. Moreover, Mr. Mkong John Yosimbom was attacking on another front. As soon as it was evident that the Deputy Directors were seeded for the position of Director of the Health Services Department, Mr. Mkong launched a smear campaign against Mr. Warri Denis, the First Deputy Director in charge of Finance and Administration (See next section). In reality, none of the two Deputy Directors was considered good enough by a Mkong-dominated Search Committee. The absence of the CBC legal luminary, Barrister Sama, gave the Chairman a leeway to present two men from his village for election. His tribal drive was so strong that his
Search Committee failed to notice that one of the candidates was above retirement age, while the other was in his first year of administration without any experience, whatsoever. Despite his feverish fight to convince the no-nonsense Health Board during the election session, these low-profile candidates failed to get the vote required to hold office. The highest score for the better of the two mediocre candidates was 3 votes out of 16. Readers may equally want to know that Mr. Mkong staged a strong campaign for the General Council of the CBC to endorse these results and hand the office to his kinsman.

Defamation Campaign

Several months before the election of the CBCHS Director, the first Deputy Director of the department and the first possible successor of the outgoing Director came under the negative review of Mr. Mkong John Yosimbom. Several months before the elections, this man has been keen to paint Mr. Warri black in every way possible, including accusations of tribalism, corruption, and immorality. He
has been careful to talk to people of influence to make sure that this first deputy is disqualified on some grounds, baseless as they may be. He kept a strong influence over the Search Committee and succeeded to sideline both Mr. Warri and the second Deputy Director. What is painful is that such a high-level leader of the Convention would make such blatant accusations against the next highest leader in the most important Department in the Convention, without anyone holding him to task to counter such allegations. If these aren’t barefaced allegations to knock out a qualified candidate, how come Mr. Warri, a native Wimbum man, holds this position and his Wimbum people are not in the majority in leadership positions within the CBCHSD institutions and programs? Why can’t the CBC allow Mr. Warri to defend himself before Mr. Mkong John in the presence of leaders of the Convention? Why keep him in this high office (Director of Finance) if he is that corrupt and that incompetent to run for the top job? This is someo
ne who had a 100% vote by the Health Board to occupy his current position. This is where the Wimbum Community is coming in. They feel that they are being sidelined through the rejection of Mr. Warri Denis. While Wimbum spiritual leaders in the Convention are peace lovers, and or, sheepish leaders who fear to speak out against such gross injustices and baseless accusations of their kindred, the ordinary Wimbum Christians feel the pain of ostracism. Moreover, the Wimbum Christians and elites are not ready to take it. This is the gunpower that is loading for a possible explosion if redressive measures are not taken by CBC leaders. The Chairman’s intended objective in this defamation campaign is to disqualify Mr. Warri who is the main contender for the position. Mr. Warri must be knocked out for his lightweight apprentice administrator to get the job. It is obvious that if Mr. Warri were from Mr. Mkong’s Oku village, there wouldn’t even have been any Search Committee meetings, or even elections if it were not jus
t for the sake of fulfilling all righteousness.

The Election

The election did take place during the December 2023 Board meeting. The Search Committee presented two candidates of choice to the Chairman. One of the candidates was above 61 years old, which is above the retirement age of 60 for the CBCHSD. All objections by the Board did not change the decision to have this retiree run for an executive position in the Health Services Department. The other was a novice in the administration who is in his first year as an administrator and had even failed to sustain the level of his hospital. Under his leadership, Etoug-Ebe Baptist Hospital, which he heads, has dropped in its standing on the CBCHSD performance scale. The major criterion for his candidature was the fact of his Oku origin. None of the seasoned administrators holding offices, including the first and second Deputy Directors came from Mr. Mkong John’s village. None of the seasoned, experienced, competent Senior Administrators was contacted to run for
the position. The Board heatedly rejected both candidates.

However, the Executive President under pressure from his Chairman, called for the decision of the ballot to settle the matter. The results were telling. The candidate above retirement age got 1 of 16 votes cast, and the neophyte administrator got 3. Twelve votes were cast against these candidates, demonstrating the outright rejection of these candidates by a Board attuned to excellence in qualified and performant leadership.

Efforts to Validate the Election

These results were presented to the General Council (Synod) that same weekend in its December meeting. Contrary to all expectations, the Chairman argued for the validation of these results. He desperately wanted the Council to accept that a junior administrator won the election by 3 out of 16 votes cast. He had lobbied key Council members to accept these results. One of his village men, a beneficiary of his leadership, the Vice Chancellor of the Seminary, shamelessly advanced a defeated motion t
hat the Health Board should be dissolved. It’s unthinkable how a college of clergymen could be so void of reason. Common sense demands that the outgoing Director should keep his office while the Search Committee goes back to work until the next Board meeting. In the present botched situation, the General Council voted to bypass the Technical Board of the Health Services and handle the election itself. The General Council has no competence in health management. Their constitutional responsibility is to validate election results.

In the CBC Constitution, Section 12 article 3 states that the ‘General Council confirms…the election of Directors and Deputy Directors of Departments by Department Boards’. Any attempt as the Council was misled to highjack elections from the Board of the Health Department – is a gross violation of the constitution. This Council has the prerogative to send any Board back to the drawing board to come up with a leader. To Mr Yosimbom, there is fire on the mountain. He wants to grab the p
osition while the opportunity lasts before he leaves office by the end of this year. Consequently, there is no room for the Board of Health Services to do another search and hold elections. Rather than giving this Board a vote of thanks for its competence, the Chairman guided a wax-like Council to disregard the Board and to arrogate to itself the responsibility that falls outside of their competence and constitutional provisions. Any election of a Board leader by the General Council is a violation of the CBC Constitution.

The same section of the Constitution cited above says in Section 4a that the ‘Departmental Board … Elect Directors and Deputy Directors of Departments’ amongst others. Tribalism must have reached its highest mark for such blatant travesty of the Constitution to have been presented to the General Council. It also beats reasonable imagination that the General Council so thoughtlessly accepted to violate its own Constitution to satisfy the avarice of an individual. It is this gross violation o
f the Constitution and efforts to validate a botched election, that fuelling current tempers not only in the CBC but amongst sympathisers of those unjustly side-lined. There is a high probability that if the CBC Executive President allows this to go, his mantra would have been defeated. Moreover, the Convention might erupt in tribal conflicts that will beat hands down any CBC scandal in its almost one-hundred-year history.

Constitutional Breaches and Unprecedented Procedures

In his desperation and determination to give the office of the Director of Health Services to the candidate from his village, Mr. Mkong is manipulating the Executive President to engage in constitutional breaches and unprecedented procedures. The CBC Constitution, as earlier noted, does not give the General Council the right to conduct Departmental elections. Doing so now is a breach of Section 12 of the Constitution.

Equally, each Board of the Convention has its peculiarities, and Board members are selected based on knowledge of and c
ompetence in the specific ministries of the Board they operate. To attempt to bypass a Board and conduct elections in its state is unprecedented and constitutionally unacceptable. Moreover, it endorses incompetence that will lessen productivity. It also creates a situation in which future leaders will find running the affairs of the Convention difficult. Departmental Boards will lose their rights, meaning, contribution to the growth of their Departments. Such a move, to say the least, has the stench of a terrible mafia. Unfortunately, CBC Christians are currently not aware of this event. Churches have put their trust in their leaders who represent them at these meetings, but they are failing to educate them on these events. It is equally unprecedented that a ceremonial Chair of the Convention now wields power almost as much as the Executive President.

The Convention is witnessing for the first time a Chair who flaunts the seating Executive President’s operational principles. Furthermore, a General Council th
at arrogates to itself the right to conduct Board elections, runs the risk of validating same, which is a constitutional travesty. Such a bypass requires that the General Council convenes an extra-ordinary General Session to ‘confirm’ the elections because it cannot elect and confirm at the same time!! This, however, is not provided for in the constitution. The hidden agenda that of saddling an Oku man into the office of the Director of Health Services – comes with unprecedented trappings for the Executive President and the Convention generally. It is an open breach of the CBC constitution and its common practice. The precedence this act sets in motion will one day include also electing Field Pastors for the various Fields of the Convention whenever and wherever a Field has problems. This is the extent to which a highly tribalistic and nepotistic chairman toys with the smooth functioning of the CBC to confiscate top jobs for his village folks.

The Stupefaction of the Executive President’s Mantras

What onloo
kers cannot understand is that all of these manipulations are happening during the reign of a most competent Executive President. When Rev. Dr. Nditemeh Charlemagne took over the top office of the Convention, he placed his term of office under the triune mantra of truth, equity, and development. There was this euphoria that swept through out the Convention. How is this mantra exemplified in the current situation rocking the CBC?

Where is Truth

When the positions of first and second Deputy Directors of the Health Department were created, the reasons were elaborately heralded the Executive President, Rev. Dr. Nditemeh Charlemagne as a strategy for smooth transition and continuity. Two of the best-groomed leaders were elected by the Board for the posts. It went then, without saying, that the Board has come of age to sustain its phenomenal growth through competent leadership continuity. When the moment came for transition, the much-announced truth got buried. What we hear today are barefaced accusations labelle
d against the astute First Deputy Director, Mr. Warri Denis by the CBC Chairman Worse still, no one remembers to run the mantra of truth by the situation as it presently is. First, can the truth be established concerning the Chairman’s behind-the-scenes accusations against the First Deputy? If not, why not? Secondly, is it true, as some CBC leaders contend, that the Health Department Board boycotted the elections? This is a shameful and false evaluation of what happened at that Board meeting. The truth is that every voting member of that Board, 16 in number, did cast the ballot, with 12 voting against the two Oku candidates of the Chairman’s choice. The one, as noted above, got one (1) vote and the other three (3). If the mantra of truth be practiced, the ballot was free and fair, with an outright rejection of mediocrity. The truth is that none of the candidates was competent enough for that office. It cannot be true that in a Department with several senior administrators and experienced administrators, only
one man, in his first year as administrator could have been found to stand for election against a fellow village fold above retirement age at the time of the elections. The mantra of truth has simply been dumped in this matter. Instead of upholding this truth by reassigning the Board and even revamping the Search Committee, the Chairman moved to nail the Board and to flagrantly violet the constitution and all due matter of processes, to have his way with falsehood. Truth needs to be given a chance in this issue.

Where is Equity

The principle of equity, in all manner of academics, describes a situation of fairness, justice, fair play; impartiality, and lack of discrimination amongst others. It speaks of a situation of honesty, integrity, rightness, objectivity, and balance. This demonstrates the good intentions of the Executive President at the start of his mandate. It is to be noted that everywhere during the last three years, his speeches have underscored these mantras. But nowhere has the principle of equ
ity been more abused than in letting a tribally inclined man have his way in choosing a leader for the Health Services Department. The drive to give the job to a tribesman flaunts the mantra of equity. Unfortunately, the Executive President does not seem to measure the danger to his principles by the man who is his ceremonial Chair. Moreover, to the General Council, Mr. Yosimbom is still a Divisional Officer who speaks almost ex-cathedra. If the principle of equity were to be upheld, the competent Board would be allowed its constitutional rights and responsibilities to choose a leader through due process. Moreover, the right candidates should be given the right to run for that post. To bypass them in favor of an unqualified tribesman is a public manifestation of injustice, partiality, and discrimination. It is for this reason that advocates of equity and sympathizers of the first and second Deputy Directors are gearing up for a contest. It is never a good fight when people go in to fight to defend justice. It
is always better that justice be done than be fought for by those who feel discriminated against. It stands to reason that gross injustice is in the process of being done against the first and second Deputy Directors for the obvious reason that they are not of the Chairman’s village. This is barefaced tribalism and a complete travesty of equity. Imposing lightweight candidates simply because they come from his village is an act that is triggering another tribal crisis for the Convention. Already, tempers are rising, and objections are mounting on social media. This flaunting of equity has not gone unnoticed. The competent candidate, the first deputy, for example, is a Wimbum man whose folks want to know why such disrespect of one of theirs. They feel (and rightly so) that equity does not apply when it comes to them.

Where is Development

It’s a known fact that the outgoing Director of Health Services and his collaborators and Board have achieved a fit uncommon in Cameroon and Africa. For a church-run Departm
ent to emerge and stand shoulder to shoulder with the state in providing healthcare has not been by accident. The success of this Department financially sustains (by and large) the other financially-sick Departments of the CBC. It has brought phenomenal upgrades to the infrastructure of the CBC. It is the fallouts from Prof. Tih’s leadership, alongside his team of administrators and Board that the Baptist Centre in Bamenda is what it is today. A few years ago the centre, which is the Headquarters of the CBC, was a shanty slum. It is today the pride of every CBC and every non-Baptist denizen of Bamenda. On a national level, if the church has contributed in any way to the development of Cameroon, it is the CBC through its Health Services Department. This is not to deny the influence of the other Departments like Education and Evangelism. The CBC has through its secondary and high schools, produced some of the best brains in Cameroon. But the Health Services Department is the leader in development. It is present
ly paying out salaries to more than 7000 employees, up from 600 at the time Prof. Tih came into the office. These are breadwinners for their families and agents of development of the country.

The reason Africa lags in development is because of ( amongst others) tribalism and nepotism that promotes mediocrity. Abdul Kalam said: ‘When learning is purposeful, creativity blossoms. When creativity blossoms, thinking emanates. When thinking emanates, knowledge is fully lit. When knowledge is lit, the economy flourishes’.

Come to think about the CBCHSD. It has flourished from two hospitals (in Mbem and Banso) and a few hundred staff to 8 hospitals and 30 Health Centres with state-of-the-art equipment across the country, thousands of employees, and a university in partnership with affiliation with the John Hopkins University in the USA because of a leader who leads in purposeful learning that leads to creativity, thinking, and knowledge in health services provision. That is how and why the Department of Health has
flourished. This is the development we want, not only for the CBC but also for Cameroon as a whole. The Executive President, as an intellectual, when he formulated his mantra of development, certainly thought in line with Kalam about how the CBC can economically flourish. Like Kalam, he should know that low-level cadres will defeat his objectives and frustrate his mandate. For the CBC Chairman to scale down competence by imposing on the Department of Health a Director who is incapable of managing a small hospital is to defeat the well-meaning mantra of development.

Provided this mantra is respected, and tribalism and nepotism are overtly relegated, the Health Department will seek to maintain leadership that is based on competence. The present pick for the office is not capable of sustaining the current level of performance of the CBCHSD. Readers may want to know that the unconstitutional election coming up next March is planned to feature this same candidate of the Chairman. To find excuses to bypass a compe
tent board that has labored all these years to put the CBC on the world map of health services is counter to development. It means nothing to a chairman blinded by tribalism and nepotism to undo the achievements of the CBC Health Department provided his kinsman is put on the seat of Director. Tribalism and nepotism have blinded leadership from perceiving the realities of truth, equity, and development.

That is the reason for the growing crisis of leadership change in the CBC Health Services Department. The situation is recent but has already built in the minds of those who feel ostracised the urge to fight back. They have a constitutional reason to argue for justice to be done. They are simply laying claims to the mantras of truth, equity, and development. It helps CBC leadership to know that people are watching. They may not only watch; they will soon desire to be actively involved in doing justice that is needed to keep the achievements of the Health Services Department and to add to its values.

Source:
Cameroon News Agency

The Kwahu East Office of the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) has held a community engagement session with farmers on the repercussions of fire outbreaks and how collective action can help prevent them.

The event was organised in partnership with the Forestry Commission, Ghana National Fire Service, and National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) to raise awareness among the public about preventive measures against bush and domestic fires as the harmattan season approaches.

Ms. Roberta Essilfua Koah, the Director of Kwahu East District NCCE, pointed out the importance of preventing bushfires and domestic fires and highlighted the responsibility of everyone to protect and safeguard the environment.

The various community members were informed about the harmful effects of indiscriminate burning of bushes and its adverse impact on the environment.

She said bushfires could contribute to worsening environmental degradation and pose a threat to farming, agriculture, and human sustenance in t
he long run.

Ms. Koah said there are statutory obligations outlined in the 1992 Constitution of Ghana, Chapter 6, Article 41(k), of which laws have been put in place to address bushfires and offenders.

She listed several communities, including Abisu No. 1/2, Ankomah, Kwahu Pepease, Kwahu Abetifi, Kwahu Tafo, Borukruwa, Kwahu Tarkwa, Mamfe, Oboyan, Abene, Hweehwee, Suminakese, and Yaw Tenkorang, where there was an on-going education to this effect.

She said the NCCE was determined to cover a wide area to address the issue effectively.

She said the benefits of this educational initiatives will help to discourage individuals from participating in harmful activities and deepen public awareness about the serious risks posed by bushfires.

Source: Ghana News Agency