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Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation - Politics (3) - Nairaland

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Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by BiafranPrince: 12:03pm On Jul 07, 2017
hammer6:
BIAFRA WILL SOLVE ALL THIS PROBLEM.

BAKASSI IS BIAFRA LAND.

THEY USED IT TO BRIDE THE CAMEROON GOVERNMENT TO BLOCKADE BIAFRA IN THE 1960s.

ONCE WE GET BIAFRA, WE WILL TAKE IT BACK WITHOUT FIRING A SINGLE SHOT.

Yes because the agreement was not with Biafran govt, so we will take them to ICJ, win the case and if La Republique du Cameroun refuses to hand it back, we will bombard them till they beg for mercy.
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Saxifrage12(m): 12:04pm On Jul 07, 2017
[quote author=grandlexuz post=58211109] This is truly a sad piece. However I doubt the authenticity of the story.. The Administrative officer of the Bakassi area is my cousin at such I am quite familiar with the crisis. As to whether Bakassi was wrongly ceded to Cameroon is a topic for another day. For now lets make do with the fact that the ICJ ( International Court of Justice) after examining all the evidences handed Bakassi to Cameroon as the rightful owners of the territory.

There is no denying the majority of Nigerians living there (Bakassi) have had to face several challenges. After a few years of tax exoneration the Bakasi business community were asked to start paying taxes as is the norm in the rest of the country.. This was met with stiff opposition and rebellion by some of the locals who had been accustomed to the Nigerian way of doing things. The locals were also given two options to either get a national identity card as a Cameroonian or pay a residential permit as a Nigerian. Some preferred to abstain from both. It costs 1500 naira to get a Cameroonian Identity card and 58.000 naira for a two years residential permit. Back to the matter at hand I doubt the Cameroonian gendarmes can massacre 97 Nigerians.. Haba!!! Cameroon is a country of law with foreigners having as much rights. Nigerians live all over Cameroon. I know of Cameroon riverine communities with more Nigerians ( Ibiobio, Orong etc) to Cameroonians. Most of them live peacefully and are involved in the fishing trade which is almost exclusively controlled by them. In Limbe my mechanic is a Nigerian,(Chukwudubem) my wife's stylist is a Nigerian (Akudo), the guy with the store next door is a Nigerian( Obi), my fruit and vegetable seller is a Nigerian (Amaka), I get my dried fish from Effiong the fisherman...Point is I don't know of any trade in Cameroon that is not operated by a Nigerian. The practically own the Cameroonian markets in sectors like spare parts and cosmetics.[/quote
nice info

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Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by hammer6: 12:06pm On Jul 07, 2017
BiafranPrince:


Yes because the agreement was not with Biafran govt, so we will take them to ICJ, win the case and if La Republique du Cameroun refuses to hand it back, we will bombard them till they beg for mercy.


Or dey bombard demselves. Whilst we play peace keepers.
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by rhektor(m): 12:07pm On Jul 07, 2017
hammer6:
BIAFRA WILL SOLVE ALL THIS PROBLEM.

BAKASSI IS BIAFRA LAND.

THEY USED IT TO BRIDE THE CAMEROON GOVERNMENT TO BLOCKADE BIAFRA IN THE 1960s.

ONCE WE GET BIAFRA, WE WILL TAKE IT BACK WITHOUT FIRING A SINGLE SHOT.

Empty boast

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Nobody: 12:11pm On Jul 07, 2017
dudebuck:
Your only hope is Biafra. if Biafra comes, we will fight and get all our properties back, including Bakassi.

U crazy fanatics should atleast think b4 u spew trash, do u intend to fight both Cameroon & Nigeria. haba!

2 Likes

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by dudebuck: 12:14pm On Jul 07, 2017
Jiang:


U crazy fanatics should atleast think b4 u spew trash, do u intend to fight both Cameroon & Nigeria. haba!
read What you posted aloud and listen to yourself. God forbid you people!

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by BiafranPrince: 12:16pm On Jul 07, 2017
Jiang:


U crazy fanatics should atleast think b4 u spew trash, do u intend to fight both Cameroon & Nigeria. haba!

Nothing concerns Bakassi with Nigeria again, Biafra is already here, forget.
We will get it back from Cameroun and show Nigeria how to take care if it's citizens and not some overfed buffoons in Abuja.
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by eyinjuege: 12:20pm On Jul 07, 2017
Thanks 9jakohai for the piece you posted. I remember it was all decided in a court and Nigeria was asked to let go.

I also remember Obasanjo refused to let go, and it was under Yaradua's administration Bakassi was let go.
He was applauded for that move, and many Aldo condemned it then.

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by unitedsurv: 12:21pm On Jul 07, 2017
MrMcJay:


Is that all?
I overestimated your intelligence. Bye.

bro abeg help me ask him if fashola or ambode is an igbo man......the stuff just dey pain me when one fool rant they developed Lagos undecided even if they did why cant they go back and develope their land.....
just simple as ABC they cant survive without we Yorubas amen grin
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by unitedsurv: 12:26pm On Jul 07, 2017
hammer6:


NA LIE, U HATE IGBOS, U R JUST DISPLAYING UR DEPENDENCE ON DEM FOR UR SURVIVAL.

WITHOUT IGBOS LAGOS WILL BE NOTHING. THEY INTRODUCED MANSIONS, BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY INTO THE LAGOS.

IT IS SO BAD UR OBA HAD TO THREATEN DEM IN THE LAST LAGOS ELECTION BECOS OF THEIR DOMINANCE IN LAGOS.

I give up on your matter. ......but as the lord liveth in the name of Jesus that rose up Lazarus from the dead I speak to your lost brain/sense oya run back to this poor man ijn
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Dedetwo(m): 12:28pm On Jul 07, 2017
Rikidony:
so sad, the federal government should intervene now, before things get out of hand.

we can actually take back bakassi in a week. although the international community will intervene.

myndd 44 lalasticlala


It is funny some folks in Nigeria still think Nigeria has a government. Niger-Area is a practical joke. Nigeria is a quasi –constituted body which has fools running after crude oil money. When anybody talks about corruption in Niger-Area, the numbskulls only think about embezzlement while forgetting the grandmother of embezzlement which is nepotism.

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by ensamy(m): 12:32pm On Jul 07, 2017
Gowon gave Bakassi to Cameroun as compensation in the role the Cameroon played during Nigerian-Biafra war, by blocking and seizing the biafran arms and food/drugs imported from Europe through that peninsula. So the land belongs to Cameroon. grin grin grin grin

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Nigeriadondie: 12:33pm On Jul 07, 2017
TheKingIsHere:


Stop talking like an illiterate ediot. The bakassi pennisula was given out to the Cameroonians by Obasanjo the evil demon. So what do you want anyone to do? Shior.
What about d welfare of Nigerians in that territory? Should they be neglected? That is One Nigeria for u
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by davidif: 12:41pm On Jul 07, 2017
DieBuhari:
Bakassi.....another sacrifice made for useless one Nigeria

Well we would not be in this position inn The first were it not for Nzeogwu so there is enough blame to go around.

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by ensamy(m): 12:41pm On Jul 07, 2017
[quote author=Saxifrage12 post=58214120][/quote]
So so true, I was born there and did my primary and secondary /high school there and so did my sibblings b4 coming for university education in Nigeria. It's true they are law abiding and the gendarmes cannot just be killing people. A typical cameroonian can't kill.

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Nigeriadondie: 12:41pm On Jul 07, 2017
That is the One Nigeria they fought for. It was through their territory that Biafra was defeated. Ken Saro Wiwa where is now after his anti- Biafra activities? Where is Awolowo? Where are d Middle Belt people all who fought for One Nigeria?
Nigeria never appreciates anyone or anything good and that is why good wud always run from it.

2 Likes

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by davidif: 12:43pm On Jul 07, 2017
fineboynl:
it will never be well with obj the afojan. he sold an ancestral community with their home land just because of world recognition and third team.

people like obj should not be talking when others are discussing national issues.

Man, it's so sad how people can just be uprooted from their ancestral homes like that. Na wa o. Can you imagine waking up one day and finding out the govt has sold your land to Cameron and that you might have to move out. So sad. cry

2 Likes

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by davidif: 12:45pm On Jul 07, 2017
hammer6:
BIAFRA WILL SOLVE ALL THIS PROBLEM.

BAKASSI IS BIAFRA LAND.

THEY USED IT TO BRIDE THE CAMEROON GOVERNMENT TO BLOCKADE BIAFRA IN THE 1960s.

ONCE WE GET BIAFRA, WE WILL TAKE IT BACK WITHOUT FIRING A SINGLE SHOT.

4 Likes

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by attackgat: 12:47pm On Jul 07, 2017
9jakohai:


I hate to do this but....for the info of the house.

BAKASSI WAS NEVER OUR LAND.

In essence, Bakasi has never been part of Nigeria.

This is one of those situations where most Nigerians will agree that the people of Bakassi should be given a referendum to let them decide where they want to be.


But if you ask the same Nigerian about a referendum for Biafra, they will say that referendum is not in the constitution.
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Nobody: 12:50pm On Jul 07, 2017
where is nigerian army?
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Kirigidi(m): 1:30pm On Jul 07, 2017
Rikidony:
so sad, the federal government should intervene now, before things get out of hand.

we can actually take back bakassi in a week. although the international community will intervene.

myndd 44 lalasticlala

Take back Bakassi from Cameroun in a Week? How will you achieve that? By magic? You think Cameroun is a small country? In your mind you think Nigeria can defeat Cameroon in military combat in this present time. Wake up!

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Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by mexxmoney: 1:34pm On Jul 07, 2017
Daviddson:
You're wrong bro. Obasanjo never ceded Bakassi to the Camerounians. He held his ground...that was the reason for the constant military skirmishes between our armies. It was Yar'adua that ceded it. Channel your grievance well.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7559895.stm

You are a bloody liar. Obasanjo signed the green tree agreement (GTA) that essentially recognised bakassi as a Cameroonian territory

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by zidek(m): 1:40pm On Jul 07, 2017
Liars to this Biafra, Biafra are busy giving themselves hopeless hope! Bleep Biafra, we are ok with Niger delta!
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Nobody: 1:44pm On Jul 07, 2017
Enough is enough, we are going to war

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by NCP: 1:48pm On Jul 07, 2017
9jakohai:


I hate to do this but....for the info of the house.

BAKASSI WAS NEVER OUR LAND.

1. When the Obong of Calabar signed a "Treaty of Protection" with Britain on September 10, 1884 Britain agreed to "extend its protection" to the Obong and his Chiefs. The Obong agreed and promised to refrain from entering into any agreements or treaties with foreign nations or Powers without the prior approval of the British Government. That is, he signed away his Kingdom as a British protectorate. This type of subterfuge was carried out with many of our ancestors. All of this was before "Nigeria" was created. Note too that unlike agreements between metropolitan powers these so called protectorate agreements with African Kingdoms did not have precise definitions of boundaries. On November 15, 1893, Britain and Germany defined their boundaries in Africa, supplemented by another agreement on March 19, 1906. These covered British and German Territories from Yola to Lake Chad.

2. In 1900, 1903 and 1906, key declarations made - and militarily enforced - which created the colonies of 'Northern Nigeria' and 'Southern Nigeria' (inclusive of the Colony of Lagos). The Obong of Calabar was neither consulted nor did he resist. This was all conducted between metropolitan powers and they understood what they were doing. "Protectorates" became "Colonies". Note the difference.

3. In 1913, Britain - for the colonies of "Southern" and "Northern" Nigeria - and Germany - for "Kamerun" - reached an agreement on their border from Yola to the Sea. The first of these agreements was signed in London on March 11, 1913 titled: "(1) The Settlement of the Frontier between Nigeria and the Cameroons, from Yola to the Sea and (2) The Regulation of Navigation on the Cross River". The second was signed at Obokum on April 12, 1913 by Hans Detzner, representing Germany, and W. V. Nugent, representing Britain. It addressed the precise demarcation of the Anglo-German Boundary between Nigeria and Kamerun from Yola to the Cross River. There were eight accompanying maps.

For Bakassi (also spelled Bakasi) peninsula in particular, the Germans were interested in shrimps and an undertaking that Britain would not seek to expand eastwards. The British were interested in uninterrupted and secure sea lane access to Calabar, a key trading post. Since the Germans already had the option of using Douala environs as a port, they conceded the "navigable portion" of the offshore border to Britain. In exchange, Britain conceded the Bakassi peninsula proper to Germany. In other words, to get Germany's cooperation not to threaten access to Calabar, Bakassi peninsula was conceded by Britain. The Obong did not resist. Note that "Nigeria" did not yet exist. This was long before General Gowon was born.

4. In January 1914, "Nigeria" was created by amalgamation. Neither the Obong nor any other traditional ruler, Emir, or Chief anywhere in "Nigeria" was consulted about it let alone its borders. As was the practice then, it was done for British economic reasons - to extend the railway system of "Northern Nigeria" to the sea and to use excess tax revenues - derived from spirits - from "Southern Nigeria" to correct a budget deficit in "Northern Nigeria". British and German maps of "Nigeria" from January 1914 clearly show Bakassi peninsula in Kamerun. There was no resistance from the Obong of Calabar or his people or any other native "Nigerians" for that matter.

5. The First World War broke out in 1914. In 1916, Britain invaded German Kamerun. Among the Nigerian troops and carriers fighting for Britain were natives of Nigeria, including some from present Cross- River State. At the end of the war, all German territories were divided between France and Britain by the Treaty of Versailles. The League of Nations placed them under British or French mandate. The boundaries between British and French mandated Kamerun was defined by the Franco-British Declaration of July 10, 1919 by Viscount Milner, the British Secretary of State for the Colonies, and Henry Simon, the French Minister for the Colonies. In this agreement Bakassi and the rest of what became known as "British Cameroons" were placed under British mandate and administered coterminous with "Nigeria" but not actually merged. The old 1913 border was retained. To codify this further, another agreement was signed December 29, 1929 and January 31, 1930 between Sir Graeme Thomson, Governor of the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria, and Paul Marchand, Commissaire de la République Française au Cameroun. This Declaration was ratified and incorporated in an Exchange of Notes on January 9, 1931 between the French Ambassador in London and the British Foreign Minister. Again, maps from that period show the Bakassi peninsula within "British Cameroons", not the "Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria". Neither the Obong nor his people, nor any other "native Nigerians" protested. General Gowon was born a few years later.

6. The Second World War broke out in 1939. Native Nigerians also fought for Britain. After the war, the British and French League of Nations mandates over the Southern and Northern Cameroons and Cameroun were replaced by trusteeship agreements under the new United Nations - approved by the General Assembly on December 13, 1946. These UN agreements re-ratified the prior borders as codified by the previous Anglo-German and Anglo-French agreements. Maps from that period show Bakassi peninsula in the Cameroons, not the real Nigeria.

7. On August 2nd, 1946 Britain divided the Cameroons into two, called "Northern Cameroons" and "Southern Cameroons". The 1946 'Order in Council' contained detailed provisions describing the border separating these two regions, now conveniently administered from colonial Nigeria - but not part of it.

8. In 1954, the Secretary of State for the Colonies issued a legal order defining the border between Nigeria's "Eastern region" and the "Southern Cameroons". Bakassi Peninsula was in the "Southern Cameroons", distinct from the Eastern region and the Calabar province and maps from that period show this very clearly. General Gowon had not yet joined the Nigerian Army. Neither the Obong nor his people nor any other native Nigerians protested.

9. In March 1959, the UN asked Britain to clarify the wishes of the people living in Northern and Southern Cameroons trusteeship territories in the run up to the "independence" of Nigeria and Cameroun. Maps from that period show Bakassi peninsula in the Cameroons, not the real Nigeria.

10. On January 1st, 1960 the French Cameroons became independent. Instruments creating the new country and exchange of notes between France and Cameroun rehashed all its colonial boundaries as defined by previous colonial agreements.

11. On October 1st, 1960, Nigeria became independent. Instruments creating the new country and exchange of notes between Britain and Nigeria rehashed all its colonial boundaries as defined by previous colonial agreements. Maps dated 1960 show that the Bakassi peninsula was clearly within the "Southern Cameroons", not "Nigeria proper." General Gowon was only a subaltern at the time.

12. On February 11th and 12th 1961, a plebiscite was held to " clarify the wishes of the people living in Northern and Southern Cameroons ". The population of Northern Cameroons had earlier - in 1959 - "decided to achieve independence by joining the independent Federation of Nigeria", while the population of Southern Cameroons, whose plebiscite could not be done in 1959 for security reasons, now "decided to achieve independence by joining the independent Republic of Cameroon" (General Assembly resolution 1608 (XV) of 21 April 1961). Note that there were 21 polling stations on the Bakassi peninsula itself and that 73% of the people living there voted to "achieve independence by joining the independent Republic of Cameroon". (Note the blunder here. By spelling it as "Cameroon", rather than "Cameroun", the UN created an opening for the people of the "Southern Cameroons" to say they never voted to join "Cameroun" which is the former French territory.

13. In 1962, the government of Tafawa Balewa exchanged diplomatic notes with Cameroun acknowledging the fact that Bakassi was not Nigerian territory. General Gowon was a T/Captain. Maps from that period show Bakassi peninsula in Cameroun, following the results of the 1961 plebiscite.

14. In January 1966, Major General Ironsi came to power in Nigeria. He committed his government to respect all prior international agreements made by the Balewa government. Maps from that period show Bakassi peninsula in Cameroun.

15. In July 1966, then Lt. Col. Gowon came to power in Nigeria. He too committed his government to respect all prior international agreements made by the Ironsi and Balewa governments. Maps from that period show Bakassi peninsula in Cameroun

[b]16. In 1970, moves began to be made by independent Cameroun and post-civil war Nigeria to clarify their maritime border which was vaguely defined by the 1913 Anglo-German Treaty. Maps from that period show Bakassi peninsula in Cameroun, but the offshore boundary was unclear since there was no detailed demarkation of the "navigable portion" of the approach channel to the Calabar estuary. Then-Attorney General Elias correctly advised the Gowon government that post-colonial Nigeria had no legal basis for contesting the Bakassi peninsula itself, but that work to delimit the offshore boundary and vague sections of the land boundary should proceed at full speed in accordance with the original Anglo-German Treaty of 1913. The technical problem thus became deciding exactly what part was "navigable" and what was not. It is this matter that was addressed on April 4th, 1971 at Yaoundé when Nigeria's General Gowon and Cameroun President Ahidjo, accompanied by large delegations, signed the "Coker-Ngo" Line on British Admiralty Chart No. 3433 "as far as the 3-nautical-mile limit." [/b]The status of the Bakassi peninsula proper was not an issue for discussion. Maps from that period show Bakassi peninsula in Cameroun

17. On June 1st, 1975, Gowon and Ahidjo signed the Maroua Declaration for the partial extension of the 1971 maritime boundary. Again, the status of the Bakassi peninsula proper was not even an issue for discussion. Maps from that period show Bakassi peninsula in Cameroun.

18. On July 29, 1975 General Gowon was overthrown by General Murtala Muhammed. One of the first acts of that regime was to begin to question all the domestic and foreign policy decisions made by General Gowon - including the offshore maritime border with Cameroun. In the rush to smear Gowon publicly, he was held accountable for "giving away Bakassi" - an event that had actually occurred before he was born. Muhammed's decision to renege on Gowon's agreements with Ahidjo resonated with a section of the population which had been hoping for a way to get out of its commitments to Cameroun deriving from the 1961 plebiscite and the colonial heritage dating back to 1884. Still, Nigerian official maps from that period and continuing till today except a few that were reprinted on orders from the Babangida government in 1991 show Bakassi peninsula in Cameroun.

19. The rest of what transpired in 1981, 1994, 1996 and since then is well known - including General Abacha's moves to formally create an administrative set up there and all the military clashes.

20. On October 10, 2002 the International Court at The Hague confirmed what Elias had said in 1970 and reiterated almost a century of colonial agreements which had repeatedly placed Bakassi peninsula inside Kamerun/Cameroon/Cameroun. It also went further to provide guidelines for the final clarification of the offshore border - which if anything, is the only issue about which General Gowon, acting on advice from some civil servants, may not have been as aggressive as he could have been. But even that is a matter of technical detail, not treason.

Post-script: On September 3, 2002 a few weeks to the Judgement of the ICJ, Chief R Oluwole Coker, the Nigerian Surveyor who, along with Mr. Ngo of Cameroun decided the "Coker-Ngo" offshore line of 1971, which Gowon and Ahidjo signed, died. May his soul rest in peace.

Nowa Omoigui The Bakassi Story :https://dawodu.com/bakassi2.htm

Write-ups like this should serve as a reference work owing to the volume of facts and documents consulted for the work.

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Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by Kirigidi(m): 1:51pm On Jul 07, 2017
BiafranPrince:


Yes because the agreement was not with Biafran govt, so we will take them to ICJ, win the case and if La Republique du Cameroun refuses to hand it back, we will bombard them till they beg for mercy.
Kids underrating the military strength and capability of Cameroon. If Biafra is created, it will not even be up to 1/4th the size of Cameroun.

2 Likes

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by jakandeola(m): 1:53pm On Jul 07, 2017
shinarlaura dis sad
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by shinarlaura(f): 2:42pm On Jul 07, 2017
jakandeola:
shinarlaura dis sad

Honestly speaking, I doubt the authenticity of this story

1 Like

Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by shinarlaura(f): 2:45pm On Jul 07, 2017
ensamy:

So so true, I was born there and did my primary and secondary /high school there and so did my sibblings b4 coming for university education in Nigeria. It's true they are law abiding and the gendarmes cannot just be killing people. A typical cameroonian can't kill.

Exactly. I don't believe this story at all.

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Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by PreyingMantis(m): 2:53pm On Jul 07, 2017
grandlexuz:
This is truly a sad piece. However I doubt the authenticity of the story.. The Administrative officer of the Bakassi area is my cousin at such I am quite familiar with the crisis. (Not to mention his predecessors were kidnapped twice by Nigerian millitants.) As to whether Bakassi was wrongly ceded to Cameroon is a topic for another day. For now lets make do with the fact that the ICJ ( International Court of Justice) after examining all the evidences handed Bakassi to Cameroon as the rightful owners of the territory.

There is no denying the majority of Nigerians living there (Bakassi) have had to face several challenges. After a few years of tax exoneration the Bakasi business community were asked to start paying taxes as is the norm in the rest of the country.. This was met with stiff opposition and rebellion by some of the locals who had been accustomed to the Nigerian way of doing things. The locals were also given two options to either get a national identity card as a Cameroonian or pay a residential permit as a Nigerian. Some preferred to abstain from both. It costs 1500 naira to get a Cameroonian Identity card and 68.000 naira for a two years residential permit. Back to the matter at hand I doubt the Cameroonian gendarmes can massacre 97 Nigerians.. Haba!!! Cameroon is a country of law with foreigners having as much rights. Nigerians live all over Cameroon. I know of Cameroon riverine communities with more Nigerians ( Ibiobio, Orong etc) to Cameroonians. Most of them live peacefully and are involved in the fishing trade which is almost exclusively controlled by them. In Limbe my mechanic is a Nigerian,(Chukwudubem) my wife's stylist is a Nigerian (Akudo), the guy with the store next door is a Nigerian( Obi), my fruit and vegetable seller is a Nigerian (Amaka), I get my dried fish from Effiong the fisherman, the most notorious arm robber in town is a Nigerian (Akpan), the Ashashi with the biggest behind is a Nigerian (Name withheld)..Lol Point is I don't know of any trade in Cameroon that is not operated by a Nigerian. The practically own the Cameroonian markets in sectors like spare parts and cosmetics. I will put my beautiful wife as bet anytime any day on the authenticity of this story.
I guess you're a Camerounian.

Please what currency are they using in Bakassi? Naira or CFA?
Re: Cameroon Gendarmes Kill 97 Nigerians In Bakassi - The Nation by abdul201512: 2:55pm On Jul 07, 2017
They should call their saviour Nnamdi Cownu

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