Cameroon Anglophone crisis spills into Nigeria

Cameroon police officials with riot equipment patrol along a street in the administrative quarter of Buea some 60km west of Douala on October 1, 2017. Violence in English-speaking areas of Cameroon over the last year is having a knock-on effect in neighbouring Nigeria. PHOTO | STRINGER | AFP

What you need to know:

  • Some are fleeing unrest while others are suspected to be secessionists favouring armed struggle.
  • Most have fled across the border on foot through the bush since the start of an increased crackdown by authorities in capital Yaounde.

  • In recent weeks, growing numbers have joined the ranks of secessionists.

LAGOS

Violence in English-speaking areas of Cameroon over the last year is having a knock-on effect in neighbouring Nigeria, where thousands of refugees are seeking sanctuary.

Some are fleeing the unrest while others are suspected to be secessionists in favour of armed struggle, who could use the Nigerian side of the border as a base.

John Inaku, head of the Cross River state emergency management agency in southeast Nigeria, said more than 28,000 people had arrived from western Cameroon since October.

“But many of them have not been registered and people are still coming in,” he said.

CRACKDOWN

Most have fled across the border on foot through the bush since the start of an increased crackdown by authorities in capital Yaounde.

Cameroon was divided between French and British before independence in 1960 and English-speakers account for 20 per cent of the population of 23 million.

They have long protested against what they perceive to be a bias towards their French-speaking compatriots.

In recent weeks, growing numbers have joined the ranks of secessionists, some of whom are openly advocating armed struggle for an independent state.

Security has worsened significantly since authorities have cracked down on pro-independence demonstrations.

DEATHS

Ten soldiers and police officers, as well as several civilians, have been killed since October 1, when separatists symbolically declared an independent state of Ambazonia.

The recent violence blamed on small, well-organised groups has been concentrated in forested and mountainous border areas. Only two roads link Cameroon and Nigeria.

The government now suspects some separatists of using Nigeria as a base and to obtain weapons, given the difficulty in policing the long porous border.

“One thing is sure, the most radical elements are in the process of recruiting with the aim of starting guerrilla warfare,” said Col Didier Badjeck, Cameroon military spokesman.

ARRESTED

Eleven people suspected of planning to going to Nigeria for training were arrested last week in the Mamfe area of Cameroon, where four soldiers were killed at a checkpoint.

Nna-Emeka Okereke, a political analyst in Abuja, warned that Nigeria’s authorities had to be very careful about violence across the border.

“For now, this is spontaneous violence — mainly reprisal attacks against the security forces — but by the time they are well-coordinated, it will be a big problem that will transcend Cameroon’s boundaries,” he said.

Okereke said there was a risk the separatists in Cameroon could look to create synergies with Nigerian groups, even if there was no concrete evidence of links just yet.

Cross River is not far from the badlands of the Niger Delta, where armed rebels have repeatedly hit oil and gas infrastructure to secure more revenue from the lucrative industry.

BIAFRA SEPARATISTS

Nigeria’s southeast is the heartland of Biafra separatists. Fifty years ago, their declaration of independence sparked a bloody civil war.

Okereke said groups such as the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) — which the government in Abuja considers a terrorist organisation — share “the same ideology”.

They also have the same sense of “exclusion” from the centre as the Anglophone minorities in Cameroon, he added.

The Nigerian government has not yet commented officially on the crisis on its doorstep.

But a high-ranking Cameroon official said “presidents (Muhammadu) Buhari and (Paul) Biya have broached the subject and telephones work very well between Yaounde and Abuja”.

Nigeria and Cameroon have had strained relations in the past, in large part because of their rival claims on the oil-rich Bakassi peninsula in the southeast.

A UN-brokered agreement signed in 2008 handed the territory to Yaounde and led to improved ties.

In the last two years, the two countries’ armies have also worked together in the fight against Boko Haram jihadists in the Lake Chad region.

MASSIVE OPERATIONS

For now, many fear that increased tensions in Anglophone Cameroon could spark a new wave of migration into Nigeria.

Cameroon’s normally reserved President Paul Biya last weekend met his senior military commanders to discuss the situation, after condemning the “repeated attacks of a gang of terrorists”.

A security source confirmed to AFP that “massive army operations were being prepared” in the English-speaking region.

Colonel Badjeck denied claims that military reinforcements had been sent.

But he added: “We have been patient, the orders have become a lot stronger. We are going to find the terrorists wherever they may be to neutralise them.”