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Misery and frustration continues for banana workers in Cameroon

1st April 2019 in: News

The political crisis in the Anglophone regions of North West and South West Cameroon is continuing to cause misery and frustration for banana workers at at Cameroon Development Corporation (CDC) plantations.
We have received a report this week, from Charles Mbide Kude, the General Secretary of the Fako Agricultural Workers Union (FAWU), that CDC has cut down its banana crops and is inviting workers to come and cultivate food crops for themselves on the plantations. Workers have not been paid for nine months. and FAWU is on the verge of collapse too.
France24 this week broadcast the report below from CDC, where workers talk about the attacks they have suffered, including having fingers cut off, and that the crisis means CDC has closed all but 7 of its 29 plantations, costing the company an estimated €53 million.
A recent Human Rights Watch report from the region, claims that soldiers, special army units and gendarmes have used indiscriminate force and torched hundreds of homes and public buildings in the Northwest and Southwest regions between October and March, killing 170 people. Civilians have also been attacked by armed Anglophone separatists during the same period.
Meanwhile, the UN estimates more than 437,000 people are currently displaced in Cameroon, 246,000 of them in the Southwest Region, 105,000 in the Northwest Region, and 86,000 in the Littoral and West Regions, many now living in overcrowded conditions, without proper shelter or health and sanitation support, while over 35,000 Cameroonians have been forced to to seek asylum in Nigeria.
Most of the displaced are women and children, who face grave situations whether in Cameroon or Nigeria. Having fled with very little, they are arriving in impoverished host communities where food supplies are strained and with few facilities for health, education, water and sanitation. Refugees are currently being hosted in settlements, and more than 47 villages along the border, dependent on humanitarian assistance to meet their basic needs.

Continúa la miseria y la frustración para los trabajadores bananeros en Camerún

1st April 2019 in: News

La crisis política en las regiones anglófonas del norte y suroccidente de Camerún sigue siendo la causa de miseria y frustración para los trabajadores de banano en las plantaciones Cameroon Development Corporation (CDC).

Esta semana recibimos un informe enviado por Charles Mbide Kude, el Secretario General del Sindicato de Trabajadores de la Alimentación y Sectores Relacionados de Ghana (FAWU), respecto a que el CDC ha disminuido sus cultivos de banano y está invitando a los trabajadores para que cultiven alimentos para ellos en las plantaciones.  Los trabajadores no han recibido pago desde hace nueve meses, y FAWU está al borde de un colapso también.    

En las noticias de esta semana, France24 emitió el informe (ver abajo) de CDC, en donde los trabajadores hablan acerca de los ataques de los que han sido víctimas, incluido la desmembración de sus dedos, y que esta crisis significa que CDC ha cerrado todas excepto 7 de las 29 plantaciones, lo que le ha costado a la compañía un estimado de €53 millones de euros.  

 

Un reciente Informe sobre los Derechos Humanos  en la  región, dice que los soldados, unidades especiales del ejército y gendarmes han hecho uso indiscriminado de la fuerza y han incendiado cientos de viviendas y edificios públicos en regiones del norte y suroccidente entre los meses de octubre y marzo, asesinando así a 170 personas. Los ciudadanos civiles han sido atacados por separatistas anglófonos armados durante el mismo periodo. 

Entretanto, la ONU estima que más de 437.000 personas viven como desplazados actualmente en Camerún, 246.000 de ellas en la región suroccidente, 105.000 en la región noroccidente, y 86.000 en las regiones litoral y occidental. Muchos ahora viven en condiciones de hacinamiento, sin viviendas adecuadas o sin asistencia de servicios de salud e higiene, mientras que más de 35.000 cameruneses han tenido que buscar asilo en Nigeria. 

La mayoría de los desplazados son mujeres y niños, quienes enfrentan graves situaciones tanto en Camerún como en Nigeria.  Al haber tenido que huir con tan poco, estas víctimas llegan a comunidades ya en estado de empobrecimiento, en donde la provision de alimentos escasea y con pocas facilidades de acceso a servicios de salud, educación, agua y de saneamiento.  Los refugiados están siendo albergados actualmente en asentamientos, y más de 47 aldeas a lo largo de la frontera, dependen de asistencia humanitaria para suplir sus necesidades primarias. 

 

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