Saturday, November 29, 2014

Sabga Land Grabbing Saga Goes Sour




          The ongoing land grabbing saga in Sabga around the dip between Madam Patu Manyu and some villagers of Sabga-Kedjem ketingo is fast going off hand. On Friday 28th of November, 2014, the land commissions headed by the Do for Tuba, Alim Gary while on the field to inspect the piece of the disputed chunk of Land were blocked for several hours by the villagers from carrying out what they regarded as doubtful and dubious mission on the part of the commission. It was after several explanations and persuasion that the villagers were succumbed and allowed the Land commission to move round the said piece of land.
         The said piece of land, which was duly acquired before now by Akumbo Martin on behalf of his family bearing land title N0 6218, became under dispute when the title was purportedly  cancelled by the Minister of State Property, Surveys and Land Tenure some months back in response to a petition filed in by Madam Patu.  The DO in respect of the decision declared the land open for application, which madam Patu hurriedly did and the villagers too. The land commission that came last Friday therefore came on the behest Madam Patu for her to declare and demarcate and declare the boundaries of the chunk of land she was applying for. In her declarations, she refused to recognize the Fon of Kedjem-Ketingo as the custodian of the said piece of land. This annoyed the representative of the Fon who was present and made the villager to grow wild
        Meanwhile, the villagers who almost went wild and were threatening to rock the boat were categorical, stating that madam Patu can only owned the piece of Land after all of them most have been crushed. According to Akumbo Martin, “all of us will “hang” here if this piece of land which my forefathers, and fathers farmed and passed it to us is grabbed by Madam Patu because she has money and can influence everybody.” Recalling how once he was called by Madam Patu, offered expensive wine and food to lure him into selling the piece of land for a meager FCFA 3million, Akumbo went hysteric. He told Madam Patu in her face to go to her native village in Donga Mantung Division where there is no custodian to land.
Controversy
       Though the villagers were promised by the DO that the land commission would be coming on the 3rd of December, this time on the behest of the villagers, they were skeptical knowing full well how powerful the woman they are dealing with is. They questioned if the commission would not go ahead to issue a land title to Madam Patu and never come back again. The wondered what would become of them and where would they farm and tap their palm wine which is the only source of livelihood to them? The skepticism was furthermore buttressed by a document, copy of which this reporter procured, which indicated that the commission had actually come to “inspect, demarcate and recommend for temporary grants over a parcel of national land of the second category by Tubah land consultative board.’ To buttress this fact, four new pillars probably intended to be planted if the villagers were not vigilant, aggressive and determined, were lying there around the plot ready to be implanted.
        As of now, tension is heightened as the villagers have vowed not to cede and inch of their land to whomever without due process both traditionally and legally as required by the law. The impending drama in the area, according to observers, need to be nipped in the bud else it would escalate into a tradegy.


HIV/AIDS Prevalence In the North West jump down Tremendously



The North West region, which for some years had topped the chart as far as the prevalence rate of HIV/AIDS in Cameroon is concern, is witnessing a steady decline as far as new cases of infection and transmission especially from mother to child is concerned.
       According to the project manager of HIV-Free North West Project supervised by Cameroon Baptist Convention Health Services (CBCHS), Kuni Esther Bonje during a press briefing, said, “before the HIV-Free North West Region started, the prevalence rate was stood about 8% amongst the general population and after three years getting to four years of the project, the trends have slump to about 6.3.”  This drop, she said is because of sensitization and the creating of awareness that has led to many people opting for voluntary testing and taking the necessary precaution depending on their status she also revealed that although the general prevalence rate was 8% amongst the general population, it was higher in pregnant women. The good news being that at moment, the prevalence rate in pregnant women has reduced to the same level of 6.3%. She said, this was also due to vigorous campaign and sensitization for pregnant women to attend antenatal clinic in order to know their status and take necessary precautions. This trends also holds the same in the transmission rate from mother to child which has dropped from about 8% to 2%.
       The international AIDS day is celebrated, she said, to give honor to those who has passed on because of the disease and other related complications. It is an opportunity to raise awareness and to ensure that those who are not yet infected take precautions and to protect their lives and those who are already infected follow directives, take their anti retroviral drugs in order to live healthy lives without stigma and discrimination.  
       To commemorate this day, the CBCHS has planned activities within its nine coordination areas to make the day a successful one. There will be free outreach voluntary testing and counseling in the various coordinating areas. There would also be a grand match past to create awareness, give health talks and in Nkwen at mile III there would be a football match pitting the CBCHS and St Mary Clinic here in Bamenda.
       This year’s World AIDS day is commemorated under the theme, “Getting to Zero,” that is zero new infections zero stigma and zero AIDS related deaths. The CBCHS as declared by the Manager has been doing a lot to ensure that everybody knows his status in order to better combat the disease. By ensuring, persuading and pushing men to accompany their wives for ANC, and testing themselves for HIV/AIDS, accepting their status and taking medication was a surer way of driving toward zero infection, zero stigma and zero related deaths. 
       Also by ensuring a better distribution network of the HIV/AIDs medication throughout the region and the numerous training seminars or workshops to train stakeholders in the fight against the pandemic, the CBCHS was obviously gearing towards “Getting to Zero.” This is why, according to Madam kuni, the objectives of the project has been attained to over 80% though without challenges due to rough terrain and the remoteness of certain areas.
       Madam Kuni also called on those living with HIV/AIDS not to live in despair but with hope for there is life beyond the pandemic. According to her, the major problem which is even more dangerous now is self stigma. That is resigning to fate and thinking that all has been lost. Those living with the various must overcome self stigma, live a normal live because with option B+ many challenges have been overcome.

As Young Nannies Leave Workforce to Attend School, More Cameroonian Mothers Are Taking Their Babies to Work



By Comfort Mussa
As a result of a nationwide campaign to end child labor, many Cameroonian girls who used to work as nannies now go to school. Lacking affordable childcare, working mothers increasingly take their babies to their workplaces. While some employers do not object to the practice, others forbid it on grounds that it lowers productivity.
Figure 1 Brenda Kiven Nurses her baby while animating radio show
BAMENDA, CAMEROON – It’s a Friday morning and Brenda Kiven has much to do: care for her 17-month-old baby, wash his clothes, clean their apartment, and prepare food. 

A journalist and chief of news at Radio Hot Cocoa in Bamenda, the capital of Cameroon’s Northwest region, she also must get to work in time for the news organization’s weekly editorial meeting at 9 a.m.
Kiven does laundry, cleans the apartment and rushes to bathe before her son, David Achu, wakes up. By the time she steps out of her bath, David is awake. She bathes and nurses him. 
It is already 8:30 a.m. Kiven has not completed all of her morning chores, but she cannot afford to be late for the meeting. She adjusts her schedule and dashes to work with her baby. 
When she arrives in the meeting room, her colleagues inform her the meeting has been canceled. It’s a busy news day, and reporters have been dispatched to cover breaking news events. 
Kiven settles in the conference room with her baby and goes over scripts for a show that starts at 10 a.m. All the while, she also attends to David, feeding him and trying to keep his hands off of her papers.Most of her workdays begin this way, she says.“I come with my baby to work and go to press conferences with him,” she says. “I love my son and family as well as my job, and I have to keep both.”She has searched for a baby sitter for six months and has yet to find one, she says. 
The number of mothers taking their babies to work in Bamenda has increased because of a deepening shortage of nannies, working mothers report. Many school-age girls who used to care for children now attend school, thanks to an effective campaign against child labor.While some employers say they do not mind mothers bringing their babies to work, others say they cannot allow the practice because it lowers mothers’ productivity. In response, one local nonprofit organization urges employers to give mothers the full maternity leave they are legally entitled to and to create rooms in workplaces where mothers can care for their babies.  

In Cameroon, most nannies are children ages 5 to 14. According to a 2012 study conducted by the U.S. Department of Labor, 36.5 percent of Cameroonian children in that age range were wage earners.
All child labor, including domestic work, is illegal in Cameroon. Under the Labour Code, young people cannot enter employment before age 14.  
However, poverty compels many families to arrange for their children to work in spite of the law. 

In addition, many Cameroonians are unaware of the rights of children, and the child labor ban is inconsistently enforced, says Joseph Chongsi Ayeah, executive director of the Centre for Human Rights and Peace Advocacy, a nongovernmental organization working to stop child trafficking and illegal domestic labor.In the past year, however, heightened campaigns against child labor and trafficking have reduced the number of girls employed as nannies.  
All over the country, the government is carrying out campaigns encouraging parents to send their children to school, says George Kisob, an officer of Child Protection Services at the Mezam divisional delegation of the Ministry of Social Affairs. 
“As a result, many girls who could have been employed as nannies are going to school,” Kisob says. 
The government has not yet obtained regional statistics on the number of girls who have left domestic service to attend school, he says. 
A 2012 study by the Cameroon Ministry of Women’s Empowerment and the Family found that 85 girls attended school for every 100 boys. That ratio has been relatively consistent for more than a decade, according to UNICEF. 
Advocates of children’s rights say they expect to see girls’ enrollment figures rise in the coming years.


 Before the anti-child labor campaigns started, many girls from rural Cameroon worked as domestic servants in urban areas.
“A simple phone call could get someone in the city a domestic servant,” says Jamils Richard Achunji Anguaseh, the director of Global Welfare Association, a nonprofit organization that fights human trafficking in Cameroon’s Northwest region. 
“But now, with much education and sensitization, people can’t find domestic servants or nannies from the villages even after months of searching,” he says.The girls used to work long hours for little pay, some as little as 5,000 francs ($9.40) per month, he says. 

As more school-age girls pursue their education, mothers have less access to child care. Many struggle to do their jobs while caring for their babies. 
Kiven’s situation is a constant challenge, she says. She has trouble living up to the demands of her position, ensuring that her organization is the first to break news in the city. 
“The baby cries during staff meetings, and I have to excuse myself to attend to him,” she says. “Sometimes the baby cries when I’m on air, disrupting my show.”Sometimes she is unable to meet her deadlines because taking breaks to attend to David slows her down, she says. 
Women who bring their babies to work are less productive than their colleagues, says Pierre Anoufack, manager in charge of commercial services at Radio Hot Cocoa.They cover fewer news events than journalists who are not tending to babies, he says.The colleagues of working mothers often lend a hand. Jude Muma, a DJ at Radio Hot Cocoa, sometimes plays with David while Kiven is on the air. 
“I help when I can,” he says. “I carry the baby and stroll around with him. Brenda is like many women in Bamenda who will not let bearing and nursing their children stand in the way of their work. Walk on the streets or visit offices and you will see many women taking their babies to work.”
Marriatta Akougu, a primary school teacher in Bamenda, takes her baby to work too. Like Kiven, she can’t find a nanny or a baby sitter.For as long as she can remember, Cameroonian women have been taking their babies to work, she says.In the villages, women who can't find or afford nannies take their babies to the farm, Akougu says. In urban areas, working mothers take their babies to their offices and shops. 
“There is even a local saying which, when translated to English, means that having a baby is no excuse for a woman not to move forward in her career and in life,” she says.Self-employed mothers also carry their babies to their shops. 
Sheila Fobusi, a mother of two who runs a beauty shop in the city’s main market, takes her daughter to the shop. She says she has no alternative.“It is very difficult to find a baby sitter, and day care centers in town are far from where I live,” she says.  
Fobusi has been running her business while caring for her children for six years.“I have to blend my work with caring for my kids because I can’t quit to be a stay-at-home mom,” she says. 
Quinta Gakwi, the head teacher at Good Shepherd Bilingual Nursery and Primary School Banja in Bamenda, says she allows mothers to bring their babies to work because she understands their situation.However, she requires mothers to ensure that caring for their babies does not affect their work, she says.
Not all employers allow mothers to bring their babies to work. Emmanuel Kiven, the coordinator of the North West Association of Development Organisations, an association of nongovernmental organizations that work in the Northwest region, says he does not allow mothers to bring their babies to the office because it diminishes their productivity.Mothers cannot fully concentrate on their work when their babies are around, he says. 
“I encourage mothers to take their children to a place where they can be taken care of against some pay,” he says.  
Emmanuel Kiven and Brenda Kiven are not related.Cameroonian law does not guarantee mothers a right to bring their babies to work, says Elvis Ngala, the director of Prime Lactation Center, an organization that counsels mothers and provides a forum for them to interact. However, the country’s Labour Code does guarantee every working woman 14 weeks of maternity leave starting four weeks before her due date.
When a mother returns to work, she has a right to take nursing breaks for 15 months after giving birth. Under the law, the total duration of a worker’s nursing breaks cannot exceed one hour per workday.Employers found guilty of violating these provisions of the code face stiff penalties ranging from 200,000 Central African francs ($380) to 1.5 million francs ($2,850) and including prison terms of up to six months. 
The extent to which employers honor the rights of working mothers varies widely by sector. In Bamenda, only women who work in the public sector trust that their rights will be honored, according to a 2013 report by the Prime Lactation Center. 
In a survey of 1,500 female workers of child-bearing age, all of the public sector employees reported they were confident of their job security while pregnant, on leave and while breastfeeding.  
Among private sector workers, only 80 percent reported having job security of one form or another; the other 20 percent said they had either no job security or high job insecurity, according to the 2013 report. 
Private sector workers also report being less able to nurse in the workplace. Only 20 percent said they were allowed to take breaks and did so while breastfeeding; 80 percent said nursing breaks were unavailable or unused in their workplaces. 
In the report, the Prime Lactation Center urges employers to create spaces to accommodate breastfeeding workers. 
“There is a need for sensitization and awareness campaigns on the possibility of creating standard breastfeeding corners in companies, public breastfeeding spots,” the report says.
Some employers do not consider such amenities a priority. Emmanuel Kiven, for example, says his organization has no plans to provide such facilities. Ngala and the Prime Lactation Center also call on private employers to grant mothers the full maternity leave guaranteed by law. 
Government employees get full, paid maternity leave. However, in some private companies, maternity leaves are short or nonexistent and often are unpaid, says Samuel Mokosso Ekema, chief of the Labor Inspection Brigade for the Northwest regional delegation of the Ministry of Labour and Social Security.As a result, many mothers start taking their babies to work shortly after they deliver, he says. 
Brenda Kiven too calls on private organizations to give mothers full maternity leave so they have enough time to take care of their babies and work out child care plans before returning to work.She took 10 weeks of maternity leave – four weeks before delivery and six after. 
Brenda Kiven plans to start dropping off her son at her mother’s home on workdays. Working while caring for David is wearing her out, she says. 
“Usually women have to choose between being mothers or career women,” she says. “I have chosen to be both.”