Cameroon: controversy over new municipal and legislative eligibility criteria Spécial

With legislative and municipal elections coming up in the next few months, a new eligibility requirement seems to have come out of nowhere. Authorities are now requiring candidates to submit a tax compliance certificate, which can be obtained from the tax authority's website. The problem is that not only is this document not required by the Electoral Code, but it can also be difficult to obtain. As a result, the Cameroon Democratic Front (FDC) – an opposition party – has referred the matter to the Constitutional Council in an appeal denouncing a "legal discomfort" regarding the obtaining of this document, which it considers "non-compliant with the Electoral Code." On January 13, the Council declared itself incompetent.

At the same time, in a statement released on January 15 and signed by the spokesperson for the official loser of the recent presidential election, opposition leader Issa Tchiroma Bakary, the latter expressed his "refusal to endorse the upcoming elections," arguing that the current regime has attempted to: "attempted to seize legislative power through parliamentary and municipal elections organized in complete illegality and promising, as in the past, all forms of fraud."

Macabre scenes in the northwestern region

Fifteen members of the same family were killed in an attack in the department of Donga-Mantung (Ndu district) in the English-speaking northwestern region. According to Adolphe Lele Lafrique, governor of the region, which has been plagued by insecurity since the outbreak of the English-speaking crisis in 2017, the attackers from the Bui department fired on the inhabitants of Ndu, the mosque, buildings, granaries, and vehicles. The Mbororo community, to which all the victims belong, is regularly accused by separatist forces—known as the "Amba Boys"—of collaborating with government forces deployed in the area.