Military bows to Amba supremacy in Bafut for close to three months as town shuts down.
By Sah Terence Animbom
Bafut Sub division located some 13
kilometers northwards from the Bamenda main city has for over three months had
all administrative activities in 95% of the sub division grounded by Ambazonian
fighters in Bafut. Grounding all schools in the sub division and stopping all
transportation activities through the sub division from Menchum division since
September, Amba fighters have blocked roads leading to Menchum Division and
destroyed over three bridges along the road. For over two months military has
been unable to move through Bafut to Wum, Benakuma, Isu, Zhoa, and other places
in the Menchum division.
With no police station and No DO’s
office in the subdivision after they were all razed by Amba fighters about
three months ago, no activity goes on in Bafut now as thousands of its
residents have fled to Bamenda and other cities out of the region. The few who have
decided to stay in Bafut live under very uncertain conditions. The Scale News
Africa took a walk to Bafut within the week to discover the new way of life
there.
It is worth mentioning that cars
that load from Bamenda to Bafut only do 2 kilometers into Bafut and end at
Agyati just outside the PSS Bafut gate. Passengers at this point are expected
to do the rest of their journey on foot. It is from this point that you move
into the Amba controlled territory that is not visited by the military present
in Bafut. This point is located just 300 meters from a Gendarmerie brigade and
control post. While Ambazonian soldiers control and check Identification papers
of those going into Bafut from PSS Bafut, the Gendarmes control just some 300
meters away from them but seem not to be perturbed.
Until Saturday November 17, 2018,
trees had been fallen to block the roads beginning from PSS Bafut right down to
Njinteh Bafut and beyond. Passing over this trees on foot from Agyati to
Njinteh, some Bafut residents who had decided to return home from Bamenda two months since they fled the town were
compelled to carry their luggage on their heads and trek over 3 kilo meters
before meeting some young boys with food carts otherwise known in local
parlance as truck. These boys then put their luggage in the trucks and push
them to the next road block, then stop and offload and carry the luggage and
cart over the mighty trees blocking the road on their heads. Once they cross,
the put them back into the cart and continue pushing until they meet the next
block.
“This is how we make our money. It
is the only thing we do after-all we do not go to school or to the market so
this is our new way of making money. When we succeed to go right up to Agyati
with luggage, we can make up to 1500FCFA if we carried the luggage of more than
one person. Once we reach there, we wait for cars to arrive with passengers who
have luggage to transport then we carry them in our carts and start going back.
Since we are very few, passengers mostly come to Agyati and to not know that we
will come, so they carry their bags on their heads and start trekking. When we
meet them on the way, we then collect the luggage and help them push while they
trek along. Bikes were banned from circulating here so life cannot move on
smoothly when people do not have a means of movement.” A self employed child of
about 15 told The Scale News Africa.
Around Njinteh Bafut which is the
main town and business center in Bafut, all was dead with grass fast taking
over buildings around there. On the road in front of the Express Union office
in Bafut were wrecks of ELECAM Ballot boxes, fabrics and electoral material
that was burned by the Amba boys in Bafut after they break into the ELECAM
office there threatening to burn it but said the building did not belong to
ELECAM and decided to transfer everything outside before burning. A little bit
ahead is the wreck of a Guiness Cameroon SA truck that was set ablaze by the
military after Amba Boys used it to block the road almost three months ago.
At the Njinteh square, The Scale
News Africa’s reporter was highly questioned by a locally armed confident and
fierce looking Amba soldier who starts by asking “Wusai you commot?” followed
by a chain of questions “who send you? You nova hear say stranger no di just
enter Bafut so? Or na government send you?” meaning where are you from, who
sent you, Haven’t you heard that strangers are not allowed to just enter Bafut
as they like? Or have you been sent by the government. Responding to the chain
of questions, The Scale News Africa’s reporter made it clear to the confident
soldier that his mission was highly on basis of professionalism and has nothing
to do with government. The soldier then permitted him to take pictures and talk
to a few people walking on the streets.
Life is presently far from
returning to normal in the sub division given that even the Bafut municipal
council is not functional due to the control of Amba boys in the territory.
Military only has 5% control of the territory beginning from Agyati towards
Bamenda reason they do not seem to want to mingle in the Amba controlled zone.
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