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CAMEROON – The country plans to spend 11% of its budget to ensure security of the country, in 2022

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Challenged by separatist push in the southwest and northwest of its territory and the fight against Boko Haram, Cameroon’s “Defence and Security” budget has soared in recent years, reaching a peak of $397 billion in 2020.

Cameroon plans to spend FCFA 348.9 billion ($603 million) on defence and security issues in 2022. This represents 10.80% of the total budget, according to this year’s Finance Act. This is the third segment of expenditure in the sectoral distribution of the budget after all the social sectors (FCFA 1,133 billion) and productive infrastructure (FCFA 1,057 billion).


The envelope allocated to the Defence and Security sector in 2022 is up by more than FCFA 30 billion compared to last year, when it amounted to FCFA 333 billion, notes Stopblablacam. After having decreased in 2021, this envelope is therefore increasing. But it has not yet reached the volumes recorded in 2018 (370.6 billion), 2019 (385 billion) or 2020 (397.1 billion). This increase is explained by the fact that the Cameroonian army is engaged on several fronts at the same time.

In his greeting to the nation on December 31, President Paul Biya reaffirmed the firmness against the “perpetrators and sponsors” of the killings in the North-West and South-West regions plagued by irredentistry. The government will therefore continue to maintain a military presence in these two regions. An expensive war against the separatists. In August 2018, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimated monthly spending on operations in English-speaking regions at more than FCFA 6 billion per month.

In addition, the army also fights the Boko Haram jihadist sect in the Far North region. The Cameroonian military is also mobilized to secure the Bakassi peninsula in the South-West region and to secure the border to the east, where the Central African rebels are swarming.

Source: Agence Ecofin/ By Michel Ange Nga

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ARMY

SENEGAL – Armament: The Chinese giant Norinco is established and is about to sign a contract of more than 27 billion FCFASENEGAL –

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The Senegalese gendarmerie wants to strengthen its armament. It is about to sign with China, through the Norinco group, which has established itself in Senegal, a contract to the tune of 45 million dollars or 27,318,489,030 F CFA for the acquisition of Golden Eagle CR500 propeller drones in August. This is in the context of reconnaissance and possibly attack missions. These drones can also carry weapons.

Negotiations have accelerated between Norinco te and the national gendarmerie. Even better, the project is in the finalization phase. A new report from “Défense Military Africa” reports that the Chinese public defense conglomerate Norinco has opened a sales office in Dakar, challenging French and Russian arms suppliers.

According to the publication of “Défense Military Africa”, Norinco also aims to establish itself in Mali and Ivory Coast, countries where the Chinese military entrepreneur is already present on the market through the sale of weapons.

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ARMY

NIGER – No military deployment after West African ultimatum expires

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No troop deployment was observed Monday morning in Niger, where calm reigned in the capital, the day after the expiration of a West African ultimatum demanding the return to constitutional order after a coup, under pain of the use of “force”.

If the chiefs of staff of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) drew the “contours” of a possible armed intervention in Niger, this one was not automatically triggered at the end of the ultimatum which ended Sunday 06 August 2023 at 22:00 GMT.

An immediate military intervention to restore President Mohamed Bazoum is not envisaged at this stage, according to a source close to ECOWAS. A summit of the leaders of its member countries will take place in “the coming days” to decide, she added.

In spite of the fact that the perpetrators of the coup d’état have not been accepted to date, dialogue seems to be still on the table. The Malian army announced on Monday the sending to Niamey of a joint official delegation Mali/ Burkina Faso, to “testify of the solidarity of the two countries to the brother people of Niger” with the perpetrators of the coup.

Burkina and Mali, neighbors of Niger, also governed by military and also confronted with the violence of jihadist groups, have stressed in recent days that an armed intervention would be “a declaration of war” to their two countries.
Sunday evening, shortly before the end of the ultimatum issued a week earlier by ECOWAS,

the Nigerien military announced to close the country’s airspace “until further notice”. They invoked a “looming threat of intervention from neighbouring countries” assuring that “any attempt to breach airspace” will result in “an energetic and instantaneous response”.

The National Council for the Safeguarding of the Fatherland (CNSP, the body of the military in power) also said that a “pre-deployment for the preparation of the intervention was made in two Central African countries”, without specifying which and adding: “Any state involved will be considered cobelligerent”.

The CNSP has once again attacked France without naming it, warning ECOWAS, which it judges “in the pay” of a “foreign power, against any interference in the internal affairs of Niger, as well as the disastrous consequences of this military adventure on the security of our sub-region”.

Calm in Niamey
Other African voices have spoken out in recent days against any military intervention. Senators from Nigeria, a heavyweight of ECOWAS, called for strengthening “the political and diplomatic option”, and Algeria, another neighbor of Niger and a major player in the Sahel, said through the voice of its president Abdelmadjid Tebboune that an intervention would be an “direct threat” to his country.

And on Monday, Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said “hope” that the ECOWAS ultimatum would be “extended”. It is not said that we will not find a solution that is not war,’ he said in an interview with the daily La Stampa.

On Monday morning, Niamey awoke in the calm following a show of strength by some 30,000 military supporters who gathered in Niger’s largest stadium in the capital. Flags of Niger, but also of neighboring Burkina or Russia, were brandished, France and Ecowas booed, members of the CNSP came on the spot acclaimed by the crowd.

General Mohamed Toumba, number three of the CNSP, spoke to denounce those “who are lurking in the shadows” and “plotting subversion” against “the march forward of Niger”. President Mohamed Bazoum, who was overthrown on 26 July, has been held prisoner ever since. On Sunday, the Minister of Mines, Ousseini Hadizatou, was released “for medical reasons”, said Monday a member of his entourage. But according to a source close to the party of the ousted president, “all other personalities, ministers and political leaders arrested are still detained”.

The coup that overthrew President Bazoum, a privileged ally of France and the United States, who deploy 1,500 and 1,100 soldiers respectively in the fight against the armed jihadists who undermine Niger and the region, has been strongly condemned in most African countries and elsewhere in the world.

France, a former colonial power in West Africa, increasingly vilified by the supporters of the military who took power in Niamey, Bamako and Ouagadougou, hammered over the weekend its support for ECOWAS’s efforts to bring down the “attempted coup” in Niger.

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ARMY

NIGERIA – Curfew established after new attacks in central Nigeria

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A curfew was set on Sunday in an area in central Nigeria after further attacks between communities that killed at least nine people, the authorities said.

The district of Mangu, in the Plateau State, has been in the grip of serious violence for two months between farming communities and pastoralists who have killed more than 200 people.

On Sunday, armed men again attacked several villages in the district, killing at least nine people in a “retaliatory” attack, regional military spokesman James Oya told AFP. The murder toll was confirmed by a community official, Jerry Datim. “So far, we have found nine bodies, we continue to search because some people are still missing,” he told AFP.

Two days earlier, on Friday, eight ranching villages were attacked, where 15 people were killed, Nuru Abdullahi, president of the Miyyeti Allah Livestock Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), told AFP. Mr. Abdullahi blamed the attacks on a local self-defence militia set up by the Plateau authorities, known as “Operation Rainbow”.

The coordinator of this paramilitary group, Sitdang Mungak, denied the accusations, telling AFP that none of the AFP agents were involved in the violence. For his part, the army spokesman, Mr. Oya, indicated that he was still in the process of confirming the details of this attack, without confirming it. To counter this violent outburst, the governor of the State of Plateau, Caleb Mutfwang, imposed a total ban on movement in the area.

Travel in the Mangu district “has been prohibited until further notice, with the exception of security personnel and persons performing essential functions,” said Gyang Bere, spokesman for the Governor of Plateau State, in a statement.

The regions of north-west and central Nigeria are regularly the scene of deadly tensions and conflicts around the exploitation of land and water resources between communities of farmers and pastoralists, worsened in recent years by demographic pressure and climate change.

The chain of murders followed by reprisals in the region has led to a wider crime with gangs carrying out targeted expeditions to villages, where they kill inhabitants by the dozens, carry out looting and kidnappings for ransom. These abuses are one of the many security challenges facing President Bola Tinubu as head of Africa’s most populous country and the continent’s largest economy.

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