'Unbearable cruelty and barbarity': Separatists blamed for Cameroon school massacre

Cameroon was in shock on Sunday after a massacre at a school in the English-speaking southwest of the country, which the government has blamed on separatist militants there.

The private Mother Francisca International Bilingual Academy in Kumba, Cameroon.

The private Mother Francisca International Bilingual Academy in Kumba, Cameroon. Source: Reuters

A 12-year-old girl died on Sunday from wounds sustained when gunmen stormed a school in the South West Region of Cameroon on Saturday and opened fire on the children, taking the official death toll to seven with 12 injured.

Communications Minister Rene Emmanuel Sadi said that "groups of armed secessionist terrorists" had carried out "a terrorist act of unbearable cruelty and barbarity".



Army spokesman Cyrille Atonfack Guemo told AFP that seven children had been killed, while the government had initially spoken of six "murdered" and the UN said at least eight were killed and twelve wounded by gunfire and blows from machetes.

Opposition leader Maurice Kamto denounced what he described as "an absolute horror".
The attack on the school, in the region where separatist insurgents have been battling government forces since 2017, has drawn widespread condemnation and is likely to pile further pressure on the government to do more to end the conflict.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attack in the town of Kumba, where the grieving father of the 12-year-old girl said he saw the gunmen drive-by on motorcycles in the direction of the school, and then back after a barrage of gunfire.
What began as protests by people in the English-speaking North West and South West regions of Cameroon over perceived marginalisation by the dominant French-speaking majority has escalated into violence with separatists demanding independence.
More than 3,000 people have died since 2017, with both sides regularly accused of committing atrocities.

“I blame the government for everything that is happening,” said Claude Ngwane, whose 12-year old daughter Renny, died from her wounds early on Sunday.

He added that if the Cameroon government would acknowledge that it cannot win a civil war, it would act differently to avoid the escalation of a conflict that has so far displaced over half a million people.
The Cameroon government organised a national dialogue in September 2019 aimed at addressing some of the issues raised by the two regions. But the talks were boycotted by separatists and moderate politicians, and they ended in acrimony.

Since then, the bloodshed has festered unabated, leading to towns and villages in the regions emptying out, and schools closing.
An empty clasroom is seen following a shooting at a school in Kumba, Cameroon on 24 October, 2020 in this screen grab obtained from a social media video.
An empty clasroom is seen following a shooting at a school in Kumba, Cameroon on 24 October, 2020 in this screen grab obtained from a social media video. Source: Reuters, Twitter
Mr Ngwane, a 36-year old carpenter, said he had sent his daughter to the capital, Yaounde, to complete her primary education due to the conflict. He brought her back to Kumba to start secondary school this year.

He said he was at his work shed near the school when he saw the gunmen, 12 of them on four motorbikes, one armed with a rocket launcher, drive by twice.

“I thought they were just passing. Suddenly we heard sustained gunshots. It lasted for around five minutes, then they drove by again,” he said.

“I went out to see what had happened. I saw my wife and saw a man carrying my daughter. I was confused. I saw my child, blood all over her body. I collapsed,” Mr Ngwane said.

 

 


Share
3 min read
Published 26 October 2020 10:31am
Source: Reuters, SBS

Tags

Share this with family and friends