Cameroon’s pride at hosting African Cup of Nations tempered by separatist violence
Rising tension over Anglophone zones threaten to disrupt football tournament
The much-anticipated Africa Cup of Nations football tournament opens today, hosted by Cameroon for the first time for 50 years.
Yet behind the celebrations - slightly tempered by strict pandemic restrictions - are tensions from a security crisis spreading from anglophone regions, shaping daily life in Cameroon and potentially even the tournament.
Authorities in the west African country have ramped up security, particularly in the capital, Yaounde, and other host cities across five of Cameroon's 10 regions - with the effect of securing the tournament and bringing the crisis into view.
In Limbe, a peaceful coastal city where Mali, Tunisia, The Gambia and Mauritania will play group matches, an explosion near the city centre last Wednesday left six injured and destroyed property.
Marinette Abah, 33, was returning home from evening prayers at the time.
We were home when we received a call that Marinette had been wounded in the explosion," her brother Calvin Nang said. We met her with blood all over her body."
A faction of the separatist Ambazonia movement claimed responsibility, and the wider movement, which has condemned the government in Yaounde as a colonial administration, has pledged to disrupt the tournament.
Tensions in the north-western and south-western anglophone regions boiled over in late 2016, when protests against marginalisation of the English language, by lawyers and teachers, were brutally put down by Cameroonian security forces.
It fuelled a rise in armed activities by separatist groups seeking independence for the English-speaking parts of Cameroon. The groups have been accused of several attacks and blasts, including against schools, escalating an education boycott that began in 2017, and depriving a generation of Cameroonian children of an education, according to a report by Human Rights Watch. Cameroonian security forces have been accused of human rights abuses against anglophones, especially in rural areas.
Many anglophones in Cameroon accuse the government of marginalisation and of attempting to assimilate their education and legal systems into the dominant francophone system.
A spokesperson for Samuel Eto'o, a hugely popular figure as one of Africa's greatest ever footballers a former Afcon champion as well as Champions League and La Liga winner with Barcelona and now head of Cameroon's football association, refused to be drawn on the security crisis, focusing instead on preparations for the tournament, including 30 new or renovated football stadiums and training pitches.