At least 26 killed in attack in South-West Cameroon - medical officer
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[June 27, 2022]
By Amindeh Blaise Atabong
YAOUNDE (Reuters) - At least 26 villagers
were killed in an attack on Saturday in the Akwaya district of
Cameroon's South-West region, where separatist insurgencies have added
fuel to long-running inter-ethnic conflicts over land, local sources
said on Monday.
Anglophone insurgents began fighting the Cameroonian military in the
South-West and North-West regions in 2017 after civilian protests
calling for greater representation for the country's English-speaking
minority were violently repressed.
The Akwaya district medical officer, Enow Daniel Kewong, told Reuters 26
bodies had been found so far and people were still missing after
Saturday's attack on Ballin village, near the border with Nigeria.
He added that the village's Integrated Health Centre had been burnt
down.
The member of parliament for the district, Aka Martin Tyoga, said he had
been told 32 people had been buried in a mass grave, including six
Nigerians.
The local military authorities could not immediately be reached for
comment.
Two local sources said the attack was linked to a festering dispute over
land between Ballin's Ugare ethnic group and the Olitis from the nearby
village of Mavass, aggravated by separatist fighters joining forces with
the Olitis.
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The attackers stormed a home where a wake was taking
place and shot indiscriminately at the mourners, one source said.
Such blurring of the lines between different types of
conflict has become increasingly common across the English-speaking
regions of Cameroon, where law and order has largely broken down,
according to civil society groups.
Earlier, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said separatists in Cameroon's
English-speaking regions had increased the number of violent actions
this year, including killings, kidnappings and attacks on schools.
"Armed separatist groups are kidnapping, terrorising, and killing
civilians across the English-speaking regions with no apparent fear
of being held to account by either their own leaders or Cameroonian
law enforcement," said Ilaria Allegrozzi, senior central Africa
researcher at HRW.
The campaign group said that since January armed separatists had
killed at least seven people, injured six, raped a girl, burned at
least two schools, attacked a university and kidnapped up to 82
people, including 33 students and five teachers.
(Writing by Estelle Shirbon; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Alex
Richardson)
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