At least 24 civilians were killed while 62 were confirmed injured in an attack by separatist militants in the troubled western anglophone region of Cameroon in what local media describe as one of the bloodiest attacks in the five-year-old conflict between separatists and government forces in the breakaway Ambazonia region.
The separatists had reportedly invaded the village of Obonyi II in the Southwest region near the border with Nigeria, the region’s Mayor, Ekwalle Martin, said on Tuesday.
“The separatists wanted the inhabitants to pay them money each month, but the people refused, and that’s why the gunmen attacked them. The toll is 24 dead and at least 62 wounded,” said Martin.
The attack was also confirmed by a local administrative official who spoke on condition of anonymity, but he however, gave the death toll of at least 15 civilians.
“After the attack, some people fled into Nigeria and others into the forest,” the official said.
The southwest region and neighbouring northwest region of the Central African country is home to a large anglophone minority in the majority French-speaking country.
In 2017, the anglophone resentment at perceived discrimination radicalised, snowballed into a breakaway movement that led to the declaration of independence for the two regions.
Since then, clashes between the separatists militants and security forces have claimed more than 6,000 lives and displaced around a million people, according to the International Crisis Group (ICG).
The Ambazonian separatists have targeted police, soldiers, officials and schools, which they deem to be symbols of the state, often carrying out kidnappings and extrajudicial killings.