Global Conscience

An interactive forum for human rights news, features, debates and events

Journalist jailed for calling Biya homosexual

Buea, December 27,2009 – Jean Bosco Talla, Director of the l’hebdomadaire Germinal newspaper in Cameroon was monday last slammed a one year jail sentence and a fine of 3.15 million francs CFA for insulting the president of the republic and naming him a homosexual. Jean Bosco Talla had in an article published in 2000 alleged that Presient Ahidjo’s handing over power to Paul Biya was influenced by a canal relationship between the two of them.  Read more >>>

Kumba prison boss, 5 warders face prosecution for assault and crueltiness on prisoners occasioning death

Kumba, Dec. 10, 2009 – Kumba Senior State Counsel Batuo Paul has assuaged GCI’s fears that only one warder would face prosecution for the gross abuses of the rights of inmates in the Kumba prisons last year that allegedly caused the death of at least three inmates and handicapped many others. The prosecutor told GCI’s prisoner’s rights intern Brendan Fletcher December 9 that five warders and the prison boss, Thierry Joel Fopa, will be answering charges of assault and cruelty occasioning death.

Brendan reported that he was “pleasantly surprised” to read from an official complaint to the Attorney General the State Counsel showed him that he, the chief prosecutor for Kumba, plans to prosecute “not one, but five warders, as well as the prison superintendent, Thierry Joel”.

An overwhelmed Brendan who has been working tooth and nail on the case for six months now can not contend his joy. Hear him:

“This is a really huge GCI victory that makes our hard work over the past few months well worth it. Regardless of the outcome of the case, this prosecution sets a precedent that official acts of torture will not be tolerated, at least in the Southwest Region, and demonstrates that small grassroots human rights NGOs such as GCI can really effect systemic change”.

GCI CEO has said GCI will continue to keep her fingers crossed hoping that Justice will at last be served the victims of the August 18, 2008 abuses in the Kumba prisons.

“The legal department has carried out their own independent investigation of the abuses and have corroborated our allegations,” CEO Samba Churchill said. “Justice will not only be seen to have been done but also served when the prison boss and his colleagues answer to the charges in court.”

New detention order for released former UB student leaders

December 9 – Buea police yesterday said they have a new detention order for the three former student leaders of the University of Buea they released a day earlier, and said they now have a new complain.

Two of the released students, Mboh Tanyi and Atanga Marcelus, revisited the police station December 8, a day after their release, to collect their retained national identity cards but were shown a new complaint chanelled in through the office of the Attorney General for the Southwest Province and accusing them of being sympathisers of the “Yellow Party” in the University that is allegedly fomenting the ongoing violence on Campus. This new complaint now included the name of Bara’s name that was not on the first complaint about the “November 26 black thursday” violence.

Mboh Tanyi said police showed three new detention forms with their names. He was at the police at this time alone as Atanga had sneaked out allegedly to meet the State Counsel. Police later demanded from Tanyi the addresses of Bara Mark Bareta and Atanga Marcelus but Mboh said he did not know. Police asked him to invite them to the station by phone but they had not shown up at the time GCI left the police station.

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Former University of Buea student Leaders Released

Former University of Buea student Leaders Released
Security operatives in Buea, Southwest Region of Cameroon have yielded to pressure for human rights organisations and released three former executive members of the University’s student’s union (UBSU) it has been holding in incommunicado detention.
Police reportedly summoned the trio to their head office in Buea and questioned them with regards to the ongoing violence in the University and then put them behind bars. When a GCI staff visited the police station, she was denied access to the students and a police officer said they had firm instructions not to grant access to legal assistance to the students.
GCI found the arrest and detention, incommunicado, inconsistent with Cameroonian laws, and complained to the Senior State Counsel of Buea against the abuse of the students and of the law by the police, especially their boss. Read complaint.
Maxcelus Atanga, Bara Mark Bareta and Mboh Tanyi Mboh were released on Monday November 8, 2009 after spending five nights in the cold police cell.
It is worth noting that the Southwest Regional Office of the National Human Rights Commission had also petitioned the Senior State Counsel about the “victimization and persecution” of the students, calling on the State Prosecutor to cause their immediate and unconditional release.
Read full details of arrest and detention
Read statements from detained students
Read GCI plaint to Senior State Counsel

Security operatives in Buea, Southwest Region of Cameroon have yielded to pressure for human rights organisations and released three former executive members of the University’s student’s union (UBSU) it has been holding in incommunicado detention.

Police reportedly summoned the trio to their head office in Buea and questioned them with regards to the ongoing violence in the University and then put them behind bars. When a GCI staff visited the police station, she was denied access to the students and a police officer said they had firm instructions not to grant access to legal assistance to the students.

GCI found the arrest and detention, incommunicado, inconsistent with Cameroonian laws, and complained to the Senior State Counsel of Buea against the abuse of the students and of the law by the police, especially their boss. Read complaint.

Maxcelus Atanga, Bara Mark Bareta and Mboh Tanyi Mboh were released on Monday November 8, 2009 after spending five nights in the cold police cell.

It is worth noting that the Southwest Regional Office of the National Human Rights Commission had also petitioned the Senior State Counsel about the “victimization and persecution” of the students, calling on the State Prosecutor to cause their immediate and unconditional release.

Read full details of arrest and detention
Read statements from detained students
Read GCI plaint to Senior State Counsel