No
fewer than five Bakassi natives, who resisted forcible eviction from
the ceded peninsula, were allegedly killed by Cameroonian military
authorities.
Chairman of Bakassi Local Government
Area of Cross River State, Dr. Ekpo Bassey, who confirmed this on
Tuesday, also said those in the camp for displaced persons had swelled
to 1, 800.
He said recent onslaught occurred over
the weekend when the Cameroonian gendarmes opened fire on defenceless
Bakassi natives at Efut Obot Ikot, a settlement in the peninsula where
they preferred to stay.
He lamented that scores of Nigerians,
who had initially settled in Efut Obot Ikot community and its environs,
following the ceding of the peninsula, had become victims as the
Cameroonian authorities had continued to forcibly evict them.
The council chairman alleged that the
Cameroonian authorities stormed the settlement, beating women and
setting houses belonging to Nigerians ablaze, while those that resisted
arrest were either maimed or killed.
Bassey said following the forcible
ejection, the council decided to temporarily camp the displaced Bakassi
natives at Akwa Ikot Edem Primary School in Akpabuyo.
He appealed to the Federal Government to
urgently intervene in an impending epidemic as the health of 600
children had been exposed to hazards.
He said, “We strongly appeal to
kind-hearted individuals, Nigerian government and foreign agencies to
look into the plight of women particularly the identified 600 Nigerian
children whose health has been endangered as a result of the forcible
ejection of their parents from their traditional homeland in the Bakassi
peninsula.”
Speaking on their plight, a spokesman
for the displaced people, Chief Etim Asuquo, said the Cameroonian
authorities started the eviction on March 7, accusing them (Bakassi
natives) of militancy.
Asuquo said many people were arrested
and taken away by the Cameroonian authorities, pleading with the
Nigerian government to intervene so that they could go back to their
communities.
At the Akpabuyo camp, three women had
been delivered of babies with the third coming in the early hours of
Monday from Mrs. Mary Archibong.
Red Cross officials told our correspondent that besides the newly born there were about 30 babies in the camp.
The official, who pleaded anonymity,
said they were worried by the poor sanitary condition of the environment
and lack of potable water which he feared could lead to an epidemic.
But speaking at the refugee camp on
Tuesday when the State Emergency Management Agency presented some relief
materials to the people, leader of the Bakassi people, Senator Florence
Ita-Giwa, said there was a need for the Federal Government which
recently set up a committee to resettle the people of Bakassi, to
expedite action on resettling them at Dayspring.
Punch
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