Politique of Thursday, 28 August 2014
Source: L'Oeil du Sahel
On a "humanitarian" visit to the far north region, Kah Wallah, National President of the Cameroon people's party (CPP) from the 17 to 24 August 2014 paid a visit to administrative, traditional and religious authorities in the city of Maroua, a visit which, according to members of the delegation accompanying her, was in line with the problem of insecurity faced by Cameroonians in the northern part of the country.
For this reason and others, the CPP blamed the Government of Cameroon for not taking the full measure of the problem. In the opinion of Kah Wallah, "the real problem of Biya is that he undermines the events that occur in Cameroon. "And even when he is questioned by the citizens on issues as serious as what is happening in the North, he stages a worrying silence," analyzes the SDF defector.
During her encounters, she referred to the situation: "it is more worrying than one could imagine.
"All activities are in a standstill: administration in some border areas is understaffed, populations struggle to go about their business, young people are left to themselves and are potential recruits for the sect who enlist them in one way or another", she complained, a "preventable" situation from her point of view if president Biya had listened to proposals from her political party for more than a year.
According to Kah Wallah, the CPP invested in its own way to develop a response plan to the war that leads Cameroon against the Islamist sect Boko Haram in three acts. First, "the coordination of the activities of the administrative and military authorities should happen without ignoring the realities of each area, and therefore the effective involvement of the local population in permanent intelligence".
In addition, they noted, "the real ally of Boko Haram, is the poverty of the populations of the North", "we must invest in priority activities that "will impact the lives of young people facing unemployment".
Finally, the last act of the war plan offers training to the young in policy, "to cultivate patriotism throughout the Cameroonian territory. From their point of view, "the misfortunes of Cameroonians in Fotokol, must concern those Ndikinimeki or any Cameroonian citizen on the national territory."