NAN to reopen East Africa Bureau in Addis Ababa

The Managing Director of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Mr Buki Ponle, says efforts are being made to reopen the agency’s Bureau in Addis Ababa.

Ponle made this known in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, when he paid a courtesy visit to Amb. Victor Adeleke, Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to the African Union and Ambassador to Ethiopia and the Republic of Djibouti.

He described the reopening of the office, which was closed down in 2015 due to funding issues, as important and critical considering the economic and political challenges being faced by the African continent.

“As Africans, we need to tell our stories ourselves with utmost sense of patriotism,” the managing director said.

He also identified unprofessional reportage, fake news and lack of patriotism as factors giving Africa a negative image.

When reopened, the Bureau which was initially established in 2010 would cover the positive strides of the Nigerian Embassy in Ethiopia, developmental programmes of the African Union Commission as well as the UN Economic Commission for Africa and the Horn of Africa.

Ponle, who solicited the support of the ambassador in the early take off of the office, said the current management was poised to reopen at least three of its foreign offices in Addis Ababa, Cote d’Ivoire and Johannesburg, South Africa.

He also told the Ambassador that the Agency was working toward collaboration with the African Union Commission and the Committee of Intelligence and Security Services for Africa (CISSA) in the area of balanced reportage on Africa.

Responding, Adeleke said it was high time African media took the driving seat in reporting African issues.

He described the proposed reopening of the NAN Bureau in Addis Ababa as a right step in the right direction, adding that African stories needed to be told differently.

Adeleke said there were many positive developments in Africa that were either underreported or not reported at all.

He thanked the NAN management for the visit and promised to provide necessary support to the new bureau.

The managing director had earlier paid a courtesy call on the Executive Secretary of CISSA, Amb. Zainab Ali-Kotoko, at the CISSA Secretariat in Addis Ababa.

He also had discussions with the AU Director of Communication and Information, Ms Leslie Richer, who was represented by the Head of Information Division, Mrs Esther Tankou, on possible collaboration between NAN and the AU on information dissemination and training.

NAN reports that the managing director was accompanied to Addis Ababa by the Agency’s Director of Finance and Accounts, Mr Dele Ojo, and the Director of Administration and Human Resources Management, Mr Abdulhadi Khaliel.

Source: News Agency of Nigeria

Cameroon Separatists Abduct Teachers at School for Disabled

Separatists in northwest Cameroon have abducted ten teachers at a school for children with disabilities. Moki Edwin Kindzeka reports from Yaounde.

In a video circulated on social media including WhatsApp in Cameroon, a group of ten teachers pleaded for their lives to armed anglophone separatists.

The nine women and one man said they teach at a school for disabled children in Ngomham, a neighborhood in Bamenda, the capital of Cameroon’s North West region.

Cameroon’s military Friday confirmed the separatists this week abducted the teachers and a rebel spokesman claimed responsibility.

Capo Daniel, deputy defense chief of the rebel group Ambazonia Defense Forces, said they are punishing the teachers for not closing the government school.

“We have asked for help to create alternative educational institutions to give our children the right of education, including the handicap Ambazonia children,” he said. “But what we cannot allow is Cameroon setting up schools within Ambazonia territory and anybody that collaborates with the Cameroonian government will be considered a traitor.”

The rebels have been fighting in the western regions since 2017 to carve out an independent state they call “Ambazonia” from Cameroon’s French-speaking majority.

They’ve targeted government schools and offices; demanding authorities withdraw troops from the western regions.

Cameroon’s government condemned the abductions, calling it the latest separatist attack on education.

The Inclusive Government Bilingual Primary School Ngomham teaches scores of deaf, mute, and amputee children alongside several hundred others.

Teachers Association of Cameroon President Valentine Tameh said the children are too scared to go to class since their teachers were abducted.

“When a group of persons take upon themselves to continue harassing and molesting children and teachers with the effects that such unnecessary harassment causes, one can only say it is a sad thing, it is sorrowful,” she said. “We continue to emphasize that schools remain no-go areas and belligerents should stay clear of schools.”

Tameh said that since the separatist conflict began, rebels have killed or abducted at least 300 teachers in the English-speaking regions.

The conflict erupted after 2016, when anglophone teachers and lawyers protested alleged discrimination at the hands of the French-speaking majority.

Cameroon’s military responded with a crackdown and separatists took up arms claiming to protect civilians.

Rights groups say both sides’ fighters have abused civilians during six-years of clashes.

The United Nations says the fighting has left 3,500 people dead, 700,000 displaced, and 750,000 children deprived of education.

Source: Voice of America