Children playing games skip around it. Inhabitants on either side greet each other and share jokes in the same language. The currencies of either country are accepted in markets as worried residents stock up on supplies.
As the threat of Nigeria's Boko Haram militant group increasingly looms
over Cameroon, its government has dispatched over 1,000 troops and heavy armour
to the north.
But the scene in Amchide, a small village on the Cameroon side, shows
how hard it is to police a remote area where militants have deep ties with
communities on both sides of the border and can slip from one to the other
unnoticed.
"We are living here in total fear because you don't know if your
next-door neighbour is Boko Haram. And we don't know what can happen to us at
any time," said Samson Niba, who lives in Maroua, the main town in
Cameroon's Far North region.
"The problem with our brothers up north here is that they are too
secretive. They can host a Boko Haram suspect and they will not alert anyone
even if they know what he is," he added.
Boko Haram has killed thousands in Nigeria since 2009, when it began a
campaign of shootings and bombings in a bid to create an Islamist state. The
group gained global notoriety in April when it kidnapped more than 200
schoolgirls from a village in Borno state in northeastern Nigeria, adjoining
Cameroon.
The militants have also become a regional threat and West African
leaders last month pledged to wage "total war" on the group, which
has kidnapped foreigners in Cameroon and has been linked to a series of plots
in Niger.
A bullet-riddled and burned-out four-wheel-drive vehicle sits abandoned
just on the Nigerian side of the Amchide barrier, destroyed by Cameroon
security forces as militants tried to cross over from Nigeria, according to
residents.
People stand over the remains blast victim Suleiman Bisalla , during his
funeral, after the explosio …
Following a tip-off from locals, Cameroonian security forces on Monday
arrested 40 suspected militants, including 20 picked up from the market, in
Maroua, Colonel Felix Nji Formekong, the deputy regional commander, told
Reuters.
"This is a particularly sensitive zone, especially on local market
days ... which are often used as an opportunity by Boko Haram to infiltrate our
land," said Formekong.
"Once they (the militants) are among the people it is difficult to
identify them," he said.
WAR DECLARED
Cameroon's move to bolster its northern defences comes amid stinging
accusations from Nigeria it has not been doing enough to counter the threat.
But a similar military deployment by Nigeria in its northeast has failed
to stop Boko Haram attacking villages there almost daily and planting bombs in
the capital Abuja.
A string of foreigners have been kidnapped in Cameroon's north over the
last year. Among them were a French family as well as two Italian priests and a
Canadian nun, who were taken into Nigeria before their eventual release.
In another incident, suspected Boko Haram rebels attacked a Chinese work
site in northwest Cameroon in May, killing at least one soldier and abducting
10 Chinese workers whose fate is unclear.
Cameroon officials reject accusations they are not doing enough and say
intelligence cooperation with Nigeria is good.
Formekong said Cameroonian forces had killed at least 10 militants in
the north since Sunday. State media say government troops have killed dozens of
others in recent weeks. The information has not been independently verified.
"Cameroon has ... declared war against Boko Haram and there can be
no doubt that real actions are being taken on the ground,"
Lieutenant-Colonel Didier Badjeck, an army spokesman, said while visiting the
north with journalists this month.
MIXED RESULTS
Some residents in Amchide, where soldiers crouch in trenches or keep
watch from behind sandbags at positions backed by armoured cars, welcome the
heavy deployment.
"Now calm has returned to this village, we can go on with our
activities normally, live and sleep in peace," said resident Brah Omara.
Formekong said the military was cooperating with residents, many of whom
were returning from hiding in the bush.
In a bid to win hearts and minds, troops in Ndiguina, a village just
east of the frontier, handed bags of rice, cooking oil and sugar to residents.
Some locals, however, complain restrictions that include an overnight
curfew, as well as the militant threat, are making it harder than ever eke out
a living in a region cut off by bad roads and is one of Cameroon's poorest.
Hostage-taking has scared off potential tourists. Ze Bita, head of
customs in the Far North region, said there had been a sharp drop in customs
revenues, even though the security presence has cut down on cotton smuggling
into northern Nigeria.
"I am afraid of Boko Haram. The whole population is afraid,"
said local woman Hadama Madina. "The government has even chased us away
from this market because of Boko Haram."
By Tansa
Musa
God save Africa
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