Fear grips Cameroon's anglophone regions ahead of voting day

The legislature and local council elections should have been held in 2017 but were twice postponed.

In this file photo taken on October 3, 2018 members of the Cameroonian Gendarmerie patrols in the Omar Bongo Square of Cameroon's majority anglophone South West province capital Buea.
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In this file photo taken on October 3, 2018 members of the Cameroonian Gendarmerie patrols in the Omar Bongo Square of Cameroon's majority anglophone South West province capital Buea.

Long-delayed elections are to take place in Cameroon on Sunday, but in the country's violence-torn English-speaking areas, the fear is almost palpable.

"Everyone is holed up at home," a civil servant said in Buea, capital of the Southwest Region, one of two provinces gripped by bloody separatist violence.

Ahead of polling, the streets were empty except for heavily-armed military patrols; shops and homes were shuttered; and many people were tight-lipped, "there's fear of reprisals," taxi driver Derrick Mbua said.

Their credibility has already been dented by a boycott by Cameroon's biggest opposition party.

Its leader Maurice Kamto spent nine months in jail after contested presidential elections in 2018 won by Paul Biya, who has ruled Cameroon for 37 of his 86 years.

Sunday's vote also faces a mighty security challenge in the Northwest and Southwest Regions.

They are home to Cameroon's anglophones, who account for about four million of the 23 million population in this mainly French-speaking country.

Their presence is a legacy of decolonisation in the late 1950s.

"Nobody has been out, nobody can go to the farm," said Pascaline Awumbom, 32, who is forced to beg in the capital Yaounde after fleeing her home.

"You can't go to the army, you can't go to the Amba-whatever," she added in reference to Ambazonien separatists who want to create an independent state.

Violence

Decades of anger at perceived discrimination, and refusal by the central government to meet demands for autonomy, triggered the separatist movement which declared independence in 2017.

Bitter fighting has claimed more than 3,000 lives and nearly 700,000 people have fled their homes, according to NGO estimates.

Tensions have escalated in the runup to the vote, which the separatists have vowed to block.

In the 2018 presidential elections, turnout in these two regions was just five percent.

According to a Buea-based NGO, in the past three weeks, an election commission worker has been kidnapped, an election commission building burned down and a candidate's home torched.

Judith Ndome, 59, fled with four grandchildren, and had to leave behind a sister who could not run.

"What I've seen, I just leave anything like that. I don't want to vote," she said in the Yaounde offices of HaRo, a charity that looks after the displaced.

Hundreds of troops have been sent meanwhile, to reinforce the troubled regions.

Police and army roadblocks dot the main highway in Buea, and commandos in balaclavas patrol aboard trucks armed with machine guns or in armoured vehicles.

Amnesty International on Thursday said 14 people were killed in an army attack on the village of Ndoh, in the Southwest Region, on January 23, a day after reports of a killing of a soldier in the area.

More than 50 homes in the region were set ablaze, it said.

"The security measures and increased military presence announced by the Cameroonian government to ensure this weekend's vote can take place, appear to have been a pretext for a much more sinister operation," the watchdog's specialist for the Lake Chad region, Fabien Offner, said.

"Brutal military operations have been conducted while crimes committed by armed separatists continue unabated. Civilians are finding themselves trapped in a spiral of violence."

Katherine Ompi, 19, fled to Youande in July after separatists threatened female students and raped some, leaving her pregnant.

"The boys will just come and threaten us, we would beg them, no we are not going to school," she said.

Voter fatigue

The ruling Cameroon People's Democratic Movement (RDPC) is the only party that is campaigning visibly in the two regions, but its presence is low-key.

Cameroon's other large opposition party is the Social Democratic Front (SDF), which traditionally draws its support from the anglophone areas.

Prime Minister Joseph Dion Ngute addressed a rally of several hundred supporters in Buea on Thursday, which took place behind a thicket of armed troops.

He said the government had acknowledged anglophone grievances by giving the two regions a special status, the outcome of a "national dialogue" last year.

Many residents said they would not bother to cast their ballot and were dismissive of voting for representatives who were unable to restore peace.

"I won't go out to vote," said Francis Mukwele, the manager of a dry-cleaning store. "And I can't imagine that people will go out to vote here in Buea — I don't even know where I've put my voter's card."

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