Cameroon has said it is
recruiting 20,000 more defence and security forces to fight Boko Haram
following reports that the terrorist group, based in Nigeria, is recruiting
young Cameroonians to fight for them.
This is just as nine
persons were killed, including two suicide bombers, as multiple bomb explosions
rocked Yobe and Gombe states on the eve and new-year day, while 10 others were
injured.
Senator Haman Paul, who
hails from northern Cameroon, told VOA about Boko Haram’s recruitment of young
Cameroonians to fight for the creation of an Islamist caliphate in northern
Nigeria.
“That was something that we
witnessed in Maroua (in northern Cameroon). People told us that they found
people in town that were not actually people they were used to. When we found
that one part of the country is in a very delicate situation, it is better to
manage prevention instead of consequences,” said Paul.
Another lawmaker from
northern Cameroon, Sali Dairou, said that just last week Boko Haram seized
cattle from Cameroonian ranchers who lived along the border with Nigeria’s
Borno and Adamawa states, adding that the ranchers have lost thousands of
cattle.
Dairou said the militants
also killed some of the cattle ranchers, while thousands of their cows went
into the wild. He said this was a huge loss, adding that no rancher has the
courage to go to the boundary with Nigeria to bring back his remaining cattle.
Cameroon’s Minister of
Territorial Administration, Rene Emmanuel Sadi, said the threat posed by Boko
Haram had led many people from the border areas to flee.
He said northern Cameroon
was the hardest hit as many schools have remained closed and people are
abandoning their farms and cattle.
Sadi said Boko Haram has
paralyzed trade between Cameroon and Nigeria that has supplied 80 per cent of
foodstuff and basic necessities to northern Cameroon since the two countries
gained independence more than five decades ago.

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