BFF-13UN rights chief expresses ‘alarm’ over Cameroon unrest abuses

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CAMEROON-UN-UNREST

UN rights chief expresses ‘alarm’ over Cameroon unrest abuses

YAOUNDE, July 26, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The United Nations rights chief has
expressed “deep alarm” at spiralling Cameroon violence, blaming the
government and armed groups for a litany of abuses in anglophone regions
during unrest that has displaced more than 180,000 people.

Scores of civilians have been killed in the English-speaking northwest and
southwest of Cameroon in escalating violence since last year between
government forces and separatists, with communities subjected to attacks,
kidnappings and arson.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein condemned
violence by the separatists, but said the “heavy-handed security response
that the government appears to have employed since October last year will
only make matters worse for the women, children and men caught in the
middle”.

In a statement released on Wednesday, he highlighted reports that armed
groups had carried out “kidnappings, targeted killings of police and local
authorities, extortion and have torched schools”.

Government forces have also been accused of “killings, the excessive use of
force, burning down of houses, arbitrary detentions and torture”.

The statement referred to the “structural discrimination” that fuelled 2016
protests that last year turned to unrest.

Years of resentment at perceived inequalities at the hands of the
francophone majority have led to almost daily acts of violence and
retribution in the region.

According to UN data, the violence has caused more than 21,000 people to
flee to neighbouring countries, while 160,000 have been internally displaced,
with many reportedly hiding in forests.

Earlier in July, a convoy transporting Cameroonian Defence Minister Joseph
Beti Assomo was ambushed near the town of Kumba, triggering a firefight that
left several attackers dead.

Cameroon’s government has failed to grant UN rights officials access to the
English-speaking Northwest and Southwest regions, the statement said, and
urged authorities to investigate reports of abuses.

Al Hussein also raised fears for the rights situation in the far north of
the country, where the Cameroonian army is deployed to counter frequent
incursions by Boko Haram fighters from Nigeria.

He said he was “utterly appalled” by a video apparently showing soldiers
summarily executing a woman, a child and a baby accused of belonging to Boko
Haram in the region.

“The Government of Cameroon has an obligation to investigate this atrocious
crime urgently. I am deeply worried that these killings captured on camera
may not be isolated cases,” he said.

Earlier this month, Human Rights Watch said both separatists and the
government had carried out grave abuses in anglophone areas.

In a response to that report, Cameroon’s government rejected allegations
that its security forces had resorted to heavy-handed tactics, saying that
the use of force “remains proportionate to the extent of the threat”.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 0850 hrs