By Daily Sports on January 12, 2022
There was panic among players who are in Cameroon for the Africa Cup of Nations following a gun battle between government forces and pro-independence fighters in Buea, capital of the restive Southern Cameroons.
It was learnt that the gun battle occurred before a match between Mali and Tunisia.
The game, which ended in confusion, saw Mali winning 1-0.
According to a Cameroonian blog, Timescape, the incident occurred less than two miles from the Molyko Sports Complex where the Malian national team was training Wednesday.
A Cameroon gendarme officer was reported dead, and five other people including a lawyer wounded.
Buea is the capital of the Southwest Region, which with the neighbouring Northwest Region, is in the grip of violence sparked by a bid by Cameroon’s anglophone minority to secede from the French-majority country.
After years of frustration at perceived discrimination, separatists declared a “Federal Republic of Ambazonia” in October 2017.
The entity, which has no international recognition, is based on the former British Southern Cameroons, which joined Cameroon after the French colony gained independence in 1960.
More than 3,500 people have died and more than 700,000 have fled their homes. Rights monitors say atrocities and abuses have been committed by both sides.
The Cameroon government, however, assured players that “safety will be guaranteed” for AFCON.
The national human rights commission and a professor of public law, James Mouangue, clarified in an interview with AFP that the part of the country hosting Nigeria is relatively safe.
“The security measures put in place are exceptional, given the level of risk, and there were no problems when we hosted the African Nations Championship in January 2021,” he noted.
“I don’t think the jihadists can disrupt the Cup unless they carry out a really large attack, even though that remains a possibility,” said Guibai Gatama, editor of northern Cameroon’s leading twice-weekly publication, L’Oeil du Sahel (The Eye of the Sahel).
“The stadium in the North where Group D (comprising Egypt, Nigeria, Sudan and Guinea Bissau) will play is located in Garoua, which is very far from their sphere of operation.”
Cameroon has been torn by violence since October 2017, when militants declared an independent state in the northwest and southwest regione, home to most of the anglophone minority in the majority French-speaking country.
Both the separatists and government forces have been accused of atrocities in the fighting, which has killed more than 3,000 people and forced over 700,000 to flee their homes.
Armed groups are regularly accused of abducting, killing or injuring civilians whom they accuse of “collaborating” with Cameroonian authorities. (Punch)
•PHOTO: Mali players
Source Daily Sports
Posted January 12, 2022
You may also like...
Man City boss Guardiola: Sterling naturally fit –...
GTI engages Partners, Investors for NPFL
Werner, Mount Lead Chelsea To Champions League Final...
Roberto De Zerbi appointed Brighton head coach on...
Amstel Malt gives support to Okpekpe race
Klopp Pokes Fun At Neville Over Lockdown Rants...

Super Eagles Train in Marrakech, Osimhen, Lookman, Akor Vow Algeria Will Fall
Eric Chelle's Super Eagles get major boost as Arsenal-trained defender returns to training
AFCON: ‘Good job’ – Calvin Bassey hails three Super Eagles players for organizing everyone
NWFL fines Ibom Angels N2.5m after Uyo violence
Lagos Assembly confirms Oshodi as LSSTF chairman
Lookman top-rated as AFCON quarter-finals begin today
Joshua posts emotional tribute to late friends
Troost-Ekong proud of Eagles’ AFCON run
Eagles must remain focus to win AFCON — Lawal
Ndidi vows to pay Eagles bonuses as FG fast-tracks payment
AIRPORT POLICE COMMAND ARRESTS INTERNATIONAL ROMANCE FRAUD SUSPECT INVOLVED IN OVER N1 BILLION SCAM
AFCON 2025: Super Eagles get one huge advantage ahead of Algeria quarterfinal tie
Rangers International going, going . . . (63,454 views)
Amaju Pinnick: A cat with nine lives (54,741 views)
Second Term: Amaju Pinnick, Other NFF Heavyweights Home to Roost •How Pinnick Broke the Jinx (52,643 views)
Current issues in Nigerian sports: Matters arising (52,309 views)
Sports Development: Zenith Bank on the zenith (52,239 views)
Missing $150,000 IAAF Grant: Solomon Dalung’s Hide and Seek game (52,153 views)
Gov. Abdullahi Ganduje’s solid footprints, commitment to sports development in Kano State (52,009 views)
NFF Presidency: Pinnick, Maigari, Ogunjobi, Okoye in Battle for Supremacy (51,570 views)
Olopade, BET9A wave of revolution in NNL (50,754 views)
Commonwealth Games 2018: Shame of Muhammadu Buhari, Solomon Dalung (49,281 views)
Ibrahimovic’s Man U exit: Whose decision is it? And in whose interest? (47,669 views)
John Mikel Obi: Segun Odegbami’s Outrageous Call! (47,139 views)