Double identity ravaging Cameroon football?


A list of players from different clubs in the Elite One, have been exempted from participating in the 2024 playoffs of the championship due to double identity.

Reports indicate that over 60 players from 15 clubs will have to file appeals for examination.

The Elite One playoffs (Up and Down) are scheduled between March 16 and April 21, 2024, with 19 teams expected to participate.

Victoria United are among the sides that sailed through to the playoffs up, after filing protests which had some clubs penalized for using players with double identity.

In the case that pitted OPOPO against YOSA, the Yellow Submarines were accused of fielding six players with forged identification in their day 17 encounter on February 27, in Limbe. The number has, however, risen to 13 players in the recent verdict.

Victoria United are affected as well, with seven players listed. This includes 17-year-old Wilfried Nathan Doualla, whose age sparked controversy during the AFCON 2023.

A demanding 2024 Playoffs

While fans hope to se
e the football season end without an abrupt interruption, club presidents on the one hand and the federation on the other hand, have been very exigent towards each other.

All clubs retained for the playoffs are considered to have met required conditions set by FECAFOOT, which has gone further to identify some of the clubs for age fraud and double identity.

Going by the recent meetings held by the Cameroon Association of Elite Clubs (ACEC), the federation also had it’s own obligations which were not being respected.

Clubs under ACEC threatened to withdraw from the playoffs if their subventions, stadium benefits and 2022/2023 Ballon d’Or payment among other claims, were not met. A meeting was held on Saturday, March 9, after which both parties finally reached an agreement.

The playoffs will determine this year’s winner of the championship, teams that will participate in CAF competitions, and the ones that will be relegated to the inferior league.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

SPECIAL REPORT: CBC polarized after ‘controversial’ election of new health director


By Wilson Musa

Christians of the nation’s oldest church, the Cameroon Baptist Convention (CBC) are still in disbelief following the controversial voting into office of a new Director of Health Services for the Church.

Mr. Ngum Samuel is the new Director of Health Services for the CBC. He was elected into office on March 6th following a vote by an extraordinary General Council of the Convention at the Baptist Center in Bamenda.

The Council comprised 58 members and was headed by a two-man team composed of the CBC Executive President, Rev. Dr. Nditemeh Charlemagne, and the CBC Chairman, Mr. Yosimbom Mkong John.

The meeting lasted over 5 hours with some members asking that the meeting be postponed to June although voting finally took place and Mr. Ngum 51 votes Mr. Njih 7 votes

The election comes months after an initial election held by the CBC Health Department was annulled in December 2023.

Where is the controversy?

Credible information reaching CNA has it that the CBC constitution is clear that the Gene
ral Council does not elect directors as this is done by the various Departments and the Council simply validates these results.

Unverified rumors also reaching CNA allege that the outgoing director, Prof. Tih was ‘tribalistic’ and wanted his own favorite candidate (a Mbum man to be clear) to be his successor. CNA investigations found this information wanting since Prof. Tih is not himself a Mbum man, but rather from Small Babanki and for him to qualify as tribalistic, he would need to have selected his fellow tribesman, which he clearly didn’t.

Prof. Tih’s leadership style has been to focus on excellence and quality, which is why his more than 20 years at the helm of the CBC Health Services saw it growing into one of the best healthcare organizations not just in Cameroon but Africa as a whole.

What happens now?

Mr. Ngum Samuel is the director-elect of health services and will officially take over office at a date to be announced. The 49-year-old is originally from Oku and the holder of a Master’s in Publi
c Health and is currently enrolled in a PhD program in Public Health and takes over office from Prof. Tih Pius who held the position for nearly 30 years.

Mr. Ngum who stood for election alongside Mr. Nji Richard (current administrator at Banso Baptist Hospital), has served the CBC Health Services in various capacities. He takes over as the second Cameroonian national to head the Health Services of the CBC after Prof. Tih Pius became the first Cameroonian to take over from American missionaries who had held monopoly of this position since the creation of the Health Department in the 1940s.

In his outgoing speech to fellow CBC health leaders in November 2023, Prof. Tih said about the likely candidate to succeed him:

‘God looks at the heart and will choose he who is willing not the perfect person. We are all weak vessels in His hand. The disciples knew that Jesus chose Peter as their leader. Jesus himself publicly declared his choice of Peter to the hearing of all the disciples. I may not do that, but I expec
t all of you to know who the Peter is and will give your full support to him or her when the time comes, and when the Board decides. I am not imposing on the Board’.

CNA will keep updating this story as we receive the information.

Post Script: Due to the sensitivity of this case, most CBC Christians were unwilling to be identified and spoke to CNA on condition of strict anonymity.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

20-year-old Chadian student murdered in Maroua


By Charity Nginyu

A 20-year-old Chadian student, Ashley Madjiadoum, has been brutally murdered in Maroua, far north region.

Ashley, a second-year student at the Faculty of Law and Political Science at the University of Maroua, fell victim to an attack by unknown assailants.

Her death marks the latest in a string of femicides plaguing the nation, with Griote TV reporting it as the 12th such incident in 2024 alone.

Ashley’s promising future and dreams have been cut short as a result of the heinous act, leaving her family and community devastated.

In recent months, Cameroon has witnessed a disturbing surge in cases of domestic violence, with numerous women falling victim to the brutality of their partners or assailants.

Despite efforts to curb this epidemic through legal reforms and awareness campaigns, the prevalence of femicide and other forms of abuse continues to rise unabated.

The brutal murder of Ashley Madjiadoum not only sheds light on the pervasive issue of domestic violence in Cameroon but also
puts to the limelight the broader insecurity plaguing the city of Maroua.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

SPECIAL REPORT:


CBC polarized after ‘controversial’ election of new health director

Christians of the nation’s oldest church, the Cameroon Baptist Convention (CBC) are still in disbelief following the controversial voting into office of a new Director of Health Services for the Church.

Mr. Ngum Samuel is the new Director of Health Services for the CBC. He was elected into office on March 6th following a vote by an extraordinary General Council of the Convention at the Baptist Center in Bamenda.

The Council comprised 58 members and was headed by a two-man team composed of the CBC Executive President, Rev. Dr. Nditemeh Charlemagne, and the CBC Chairman, Mr. Yosimbom Mkong John.

The meeting lasted over 5 hours with some members asking that the meeting be postponed to June although voting finally took place and Mr. Ngum Samuel got 51 votes against his contender Mr. Njih Richard who got 7 votes.

The election comes months after an initial election held by the CBC Health Department (as per the CBC Constitution) was annulled in
December 2023.

Where is the controversy?

Credible information reaching CNA has it that the CBC constitution is clear that the General Council does not elect directors as this is done by the various Departments and the Council simply validates these results.

However, there were complaints from some quarters and CNA got firsthand information from an insider alleging that Mr. Mkong arm-twisted the well-meaning CBC Executive President into accepting the candidate (in this case Mr. Ngum) who was his (Mkong’s) favorite candidate.

Unverified rumors also reaching CNA allege that the outgoing director, Prof. Tih was ‘tribalistic’ and wanted his own favorite candidate (a Mbum man) to be his successor. CNA investigations found this information to be false since Prof. Tih is not himself a Mbum man, but rather from Small Babanki and for him to qualify as tribalistic, he would need to have selected his fellow tribesman for the job, which he clearly didn’t.

Prof. Tih’s leadership style has been to focus on excellence a
nd quality, which is why his more than 30 years at the helm of the CBC Health Services saw it growing into one of the best healthcare organizations not just in Cameroon but Africa as a whole.

What happens now?

Mr. Ngum Samuel is the director-elect of health services and will officially take over office at a date to be announced. The 49-year-old is originally from Oku and the holder of a Master’s in Public Health. He is currently enrolled in a PhD program in Public Health and takes over office from Prof. Tih Pius who held the position for over 30 years.

Mr. Ngum who stood for election alongside Mr. Nji Richard (current administrator at Banso Baptist Hospital), has served the CBC Health Services in various capacities. He takes over as the second Cameroonian national to head the Health Services of the CBC after Prof. Tih Pius became the first Cameroonian to take over from American missionaries who had held monopoly of this position since the creation of the CBC Health Department in the 1940s.

In his outgoing
speech to fellow CBC health leaders in November 2023, Prof. Tih said about the likely candidate to succeed him:

‘God looks at the heart and will choose who is willing, not the perfect person. We are all weak vessels in His hand. The disciples knew that Jesus chose Peter as their leader. Jesus himself publicly declared his choice of Peter to the hearing of all the disciples. I may not do that, but I expect all of you to know who the Peter is and will give your full support to him or her when the time comes, and when the Board decides. I am not imposing on the Board’.

CNA will keep updating this story as we receive the information.

Post Script: Due to the sensitivity of this case, most CBC Christians were unwilling to be identified and spoke to CNA on condition of strict anonymity.

Source: Cameroon News Agency