There has been renewed fight over the ownership of Bakassi Peninsula
as Cameroon gendarmes launched an attack on Efot Ebot Ikot village in
Bakassi with 11 persons feared dead and about 1,800 displaced. Early
last month, there had been misunderstanding between the Bakassi people
living in the Peninsula and the Cameroon Government. The Cameroon
Government is accusing Nigerians of not paying tax while Nigerians are
complaining of double taxation and all sorts of human indignities meted
out to them by the gendarmes.
The development had led to series of confrontations between the
Cameroonian authorities and the Nigerian nationals with over 300 fishing
boats and nets seized by Cameroon security agents. Disclosing this
while addressing newsmen during the visit to the displaced people of
Bakassi at the camp at St. Mark’s Primary School, Akpabuyo Local
Government Area of Cross River State, former senator representing
Southern Senatorial District at the National Assembly, Senator Florence
Ita-Giwa, said it was a pity that Cameroon government was not respecting
the Green Tree Agreement and rather took pleasure in engaging in all
sorts of human rights abuses. Ita-Giwa described the situation as being
unbearable as the people were living in deplorable condition.
She said children and pregnant women had no water, food or clothing
with neither medicine nor good sanitary condition to produce succor to
the displaced people. Ita-Giwa urged the Federal Government and the
international community to take proactive steps to resettle the people
at Dayspring Island where the refugees wanted to be resettled. “It is
not their fault that the land was ceded to the Cameroons. Our people
don’t want to remain here and continue to beg for alms.
They want to be resettled in a place they can become
self-sustaining.” Confirming that 11 persons might have died in the
process, the camp master for the displaced people of Bakassi, Chief Etim
Okon Ene, said the Bakassi people needed restoration against the Green
Tree Agreement. Also speaking, the paramount ruler of Bakassi, His
Highness Etiyin Etim Okon Edet said he was happy that President Goodluck
Jonathan set up the Presidential Committee on Resettlement of Bakassi
People, which Senator Giwa was a member but lamented that the
implementation process of resolution on the matter had been very slow.
To cushion their hardship, the Director General of the Cross River
State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), Mr. Vincent Aqua, had sent
relief materials to the displaced people. The materials include
mattresses, cartons of Indomie Noddles, bags of salt, rice, garri,
blankets. Aqua urged the refugees to be calm as the state government was
aware of their plight, stressing that very soon government was going to
give directives to Akpabuyo and Bakassi Local Government Council
authorities to come up with palliative measures that would alleviate the
sufferings of the people.
Liason Officer, National Union for Nigeria and Cameroon, Prince Aston
Joseph, lamented that his people who previously could fish within the
length and breadth of the waters had now been restricted from going to
those regions that were viable for making a big cash, as they were no
longer allowed to go beyond a particular boundary. Aston complained that
Bakassi people had so far lost over 300 fishing boats and nets to the
gendarmes and urged the Federal Government to come to the rescue of
three women who had so far given birth to babies at the camp.
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