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Infos: Cameroon: The hunt for drinking water in Douala

Like many Douala resident, computer scientist Cédric gets his water supply at the at the Guinness brewery in Bassa, in Douala, Cameroon.   –   Copyright © africanews AFP By Rédaction Africanews and AFP Last updated: 22/03 – 10:36 Cameroon For some residents of Cameroon’s economic capital it is a routine to get up early and queue

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Infos: Cameroon: The hunt for drinking water in Douala
Like many Douala resident, computer scientist Cédric gets his water supply at the at the Guinness brewery in Bassa, in Douala, Cameroon.   –  

Copyright © africanews

AFP

Cameroon

For some residents of Cameroon’s economic capital it is a routine to get up early and queue outside a brewery to fill their bottles with water.

The public water utility Camwater is not reliable which makes the business of drilling for water a lucrative one. It is good deal for private contractors and the only option for many residents.

“Drinking water sources are extremely rare, it is so rare and not very visible and few neighborhoods have them,” Cédric a computer scientist deplores.

“So, when there is a point like this, everyone rushes. You could already see how difficult it is for people to get it from here. It’s a struggle, the struggle is real. it’s not easy at all. Accessing drinking water in the city of Douala is like a treasure.”

If the government says that Camwater supplies most of housewolds, it is clear that many the demand actually exceeds the supply. In addition to a lack of infrastructure, teh city of Douala continues to spread, worsening the problem of the access to drinking water.

Lack of infrastructure and growing population

“We live in peripheral neighbourhoods and the water is not safe for drinking there,  Jodelle, a housewife says. “

So we’d rather travel to get drinking water here. Access to drinking water is still a problem in our country.”

Private contractors have launched many project for those who can pay. Indeed, drilling cost over 25 times the minimum wage. In the PK12 district near Douala, technicians are busy drilling in search of groundwater.

“Geophysical studies direct the way we select the sites,” Tindo Kaze says.

“We did geophysical studies here, and we were shown a source, we were told a point where we had to drill, that’s where we positioned the machin. They told us we could find groundwater about 50 to 70 meters deep, so that’s what we’re going for.”

Authorities have however warned: drilling works that are not made at the required depths or that have possible points of contamination around present health risks.

President Paul Biya might have got the measure of the issue: in his New Year’s address, he “asked the government” to launch urgently, “starting from 2023”, a “mega-project of drinking water supply” in Douala and its surroundings.

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              Infos: Georgia announces release of two sailors kidnapped by pirates off Gabon

              Nigerian Navy Special Forces board a ship in the Gulf of Guinea on …   –   Copyright © africanews Sunday Alamba/Copyright 2019 The AP By Rédaction Africanews with AFP Last updated: 24/05 – 12:34 Gabon Georgia on Wednesday announced the release of two sailors kidnapped in early May by pirates off the coast of Gabon, close

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              Infos: Georgia announces release of two sailors kidnapped by pirates off Gabon
              Nigerian Navy Special Forces board a ship in the Gulf of Guinea on …   –  

              Copyright © africanews

              Sunday Alamba/Copyright 2019 The AP

              Gabon

              Georgia on Wednesday announced the release of two sailors kidnapped in early May by pirates off the coast of Gabon, close to a Gabonese commercial port.

              “The two Georgian sailors kidnapped in Gabon were released on 21 May thanks to the efforts of the Georgian foreign ministry, the Georgian embassy in South Africa, and the Georgian shipping agency,” Georgian diplomatic spokeswoman Mari Nartchemashvili told AFP.

              “The sailors were kidnapped on 2 May when pirates attacked their ship, the Grebe Bulker, which was docked in Gabonese territorial waters,” she said.

              The 190-meter-long bulk carrier, owned by the US shipping company Eagle Bulk Shipping Inc. but flying the Marshall Islands flag, was attacked while at anchor less than eight kilometres off the Gabonese commercial port of Owendo, on the outskirts of the capital, Libreville, a judicial source in Gabon told AFP earlier on condition of anonymity.

              According to this source, “unknown persons” kidnapped the captain of the ship, a Russian, and his second and third officers, two Georgians.

              The freed sailors are in “satisfactory condition”, Ms. Nartchemashvili said, without giving details of the conditions of their release or the fate of the Russian captain.

              The attack was one of the closest to the coast and to a major Gabonese city ever committed by pirates.

              The Gulf of Guinea, especially off the coasts of Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea, is often the scene of attacks by pirates who take their hostages to Nigeria and release them, sometimes after some time, for ransom.

              In January, the International Maritime Bureau (IMB) based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, announced that global piracy in 2022 was at its lowest level since 1992. The waters of the Gulf of Guinea previously considered the epicentre of global maritime piracy over the past decade, also saw a decline in such attacks in 2022.

              But since the beginning of the year, the number of these acts seems to be on the rise again, with at least two recorded in just over a month, and several others foiled.

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                          Infos: Cameroon: 30 women kidnapped by Anglophone separatists

                          Parents and relatives attend a commemoration five years after   –   Copyright © africanews AUDU ALI MARTE/AFP or licensors By Rédaction Africanews with AFP Last updated: 24/05 – 11:40 Cameroon A group of 30 women were kidnapped by pro-independence rebels nearly four days ago in western Cameroon, which has been bloodied for more than six years

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                          Infos: Cameroon: 30 women kidnapped by Anglophone separatists
                          Parents and relatives attend a commemoration five years after   –  

                          Copyright © africanews

                          AUDU ALI MARTE/AFP or licensors

                          Cameroon

                          A group of 30 women were kidnapped by pro-independence rebels nearly four days ago in western Cameroon, which has been bloodied for more than six years by a conflict between separatists from the English-speaking minority and the security forces, according to authorities.

                          They were “severely tortured and abducted by armed terrorists” in the village of Kedjom Keku, in the North West region, where armed separatist groups frequently kidnap civilians, mainly for ransom, the prefecture of the Mezam department said in a statement Tuesday.

                          The authorities always use the word “terrorists” to refer to armed rebels demanding independence for the North-West and South-West regions, which they call “Ambazonia”, populated mainly by the English-speaking minority of this predominantly French-speaking central African country.

                          “A colonel in the army told AFP on Tuesday evening that some 30 women were abducted by separatists on Saturday morning and that they had not yet been found. The communication service of the Ministry of Territorial Administration confirmed to AFP that the authorities had “no news of the hostages” on Tuesday evening.

                          The day before their abduction, these “elderly” women were organising a “peaceful march to protest (…) against the exactions and criminal activities of the terrorists”, the Mezam prefecture said.

                          The two English-speaking regions have been the scene of a deadly conflict since late 2016 between separatist rebels on one side, who call themselves the “Amba Boys” or “Amba Fighters”, and the army and police on the other, both sides being regularly accused by international NGOs and the UN of crimes against civilians.

                          The conflict has left more than 6,000 people dead and forced more than a million people to move, according to the International Crisis Group (ICG) think tank.

                          – “Taxes”-

                          The women had “publicly demonstrated” the day before their abduction against “the exploitative activities of the Amba Fighters” and in particular the obligation imposed on civilians by the latter to pay them “monthly taxes of 10,000 CFA francs (15 euros) for men and 5,000 for women (7.50 euros)”, explains in a statement the Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa (CHRDA), an NGO based in Yaoundé which documents human rights violations in Africa.

                          The rebels claim that they collect these “taxes” to finance their “war effort for independence”.

                          A video is circulating on social networks, purporting to show these women, sitting on the ground and obviously frightened, which AFP was unable to authenticate but which the CHRDA quotes and describes in its statement, ensuring that it was posted by the “Amba Boys”.

                          Armed men insulted and threatened them, saying they were going to kill the women, whom they accused of “complicity with the military”, according to the CHRDA, which denounced a “barbaric act” by their kidnappers.

                          Some armed rebel groups regularly carry out kidnappings for ransom of civilians, sometimes in large groups like the abduction of these 30 women, especially in schools that they accuse of teaching French.

                          They also regularly commit targeted assassinations against representatives of the authorities but also against civilians whom they accuse of “collaborating with the army”.

                          Their abuses are regularly denounced by international NGOs and the UN, which also regularly accuse the army of committing fatal blunders against civilians, summary executions, acts of torture and even raids and killings in villages.

                          The conflict broke out at the end of 2016 after the violent repression of peaceful demonstrations by members of English-speaking civil society, some of whom feel ostracised by the French-speaking majority of this country, which has been ruled with an iron fist for more than 40 years by President Paul Biya, 90.

                          The latter has been intractable, even towards the more moderate who call for a federalist solution to the conflict, and his regime has deployed the elite army and police on a massive scale for more than six years to suppress the rebellion.

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                                      Infos: Vinícius incident: La Liga, racism and African players

                                      Barcelona’s Samuel Eto’o, left, and Yaya Toure celebrate after the UEFA Champions League final soccer match between Manchester United and Barcelona in Rome, May 27, 2009.   –   Copyright © africanews Jon Super/AP By Rédaction Africanews and AFP Last updated: 14 hours ago Spain Racist abuse Brazilian player Vinicius suffered Sunday (May 21) brings back to

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                                      Infos: Vinícius incident: La Liga, racism and African players
                                      Barcelona’s Samuel Eto’o, left, and Yaya Toure celebrate after the UEFA Champions League final soccer match between Manchester United and Barcelona in Rome, May 27, 2009.   –  

                                      Copyright © africanews

                                      Jon Super/AP

                                      Spain

                                      Racist abuse Brazilian player Vinicius suffered Sunday (May 21) brings back to mind bad memories.**Sunday’s incident was not the first occurrence of racism in Spain’s top football league commonly known as La Liga.  For the past 40 years, players, some dark-skinned and Africans have suffered racism at the hands of “supporters”.

                                      A star in Cameroon but little known in Spain upon his arrival in club Espanyol Barcelone in 1982, Thomas Nkono was racially abused in the Camp Nou stadium during a derby against F.C Barcelone.

                                      Some members of the public chanted racist songs and threw bananas on the pitch.

                                      Speaking recently to a reporter from Spanish pure player El Confidencial, the now 66-year-old goalkeeper had not forgotten the incident: “the funniest was that, in the stands, one section called me names when another whistled at them for them to stop. I’ve also took that as a challenge.”

                                      Monkey chanting

                                      Idriss Carlos Kameni, a compatriot of Nkono and fellow player at Espanyol Barcelone, also suffered racist chants from the public in Zaragoza in 2004.

                                      The goalkeeper revealed his worst memory as he spoke to Cadena Ser radio in 2017: “We were winning 1-0 and they had called me names.”

                                      “Even the referee asked me if I felt well enough to keep on playing. I didn’t even know where I was anymore, but I found the strength to keep playing.”

                                      Alfonso Perez Burrull halted a fixture in 2005 because of racist abuse spectators inflicted on Kameni in in Malaga.

                                      Reuters called him that year “one of the most active referees in reporting racist behaviour by fans.”

                                      And there was no shortage of abuse. Bananas would be thrown on Kameni at the Atlético Madrid’s stadium. “When a person goes through such a thing, they can go back home and commit suicide,” the footballer told TV station Movistar in 2020.

                                      “Nobody can ever imagine what I lived.”

                                      Not playing anymore

                                      Samuel Eto’o’s five years at the FC Barcelone (2004-2009) were punctuated by racist abuse.

                                      In an incident, the forward lobbed a ball at Getafe fans after some made monkey noises from the stands. For that, Eto’o got a yellow card.

                                      Deux weeks later, as his club played Albacete, the Cameroonian legend was once again racially abused.

                                      As the litany of abuse continued Eto’o defiantly celebrated a goal against Real Zaragoza in 2005.

                                      “[…] If somebody pays for a ticket to make a monkey noise at me, then I’ll act like a monkey,” he later stated.

                                      This culminated in 2006 when, as Eto’o yet again faced Zaragoza. The star player had suffered racist taunts from a section of the stands for a large part of the fixture.

                                      At some point, as he was to shoot a corner, he was not having it anymore.

                                      “No más! No juego más!”, he would not be player anymore. As he started walking off the pitch, his teammates, players from Zaragoza’s and the referee tried to convince him to stay. But he was unwilling. It is eventually after yet another intervention that the Cameroonian player continued the fixture.

                                      A few days later, the Spanish federation fined Real Zaragoza 9,000 euros.

                                      We stand by you

                                      In 2020, Athletic Bilbao forward Iñaki Williams was subjected to racist chant as he was being substituted.

                                      The Ghanaian had already suffered racist insult in Gijon, in 2016. The incident prompted the referee to halt the fixture for a few minutes.

                                      Spain’s Prime Minister condemned the episode and the country’s most sold paper Marca chose as headline for its cover “All of Us are Williams: Enough of racism”

                                      Two supporters of the Espanyol would eventually be prosecuted.  

                                      The list of Africna players who have suffered racism on the pitch is long: Nico Williams, Mouctar Diakhaby, Frédéric Kanouté, Yaya Touré and many more were abused.

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