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Subject: [MINCAM] Fw: [AFOaKOM] Regime fights off graft claims against Biya son
From: Mathias waindim <wmndzi@yahoo.com>
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Subject: [MINCAM] Fw: [AFOaKOM] Regime fights off graft claims against Biya son
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Subject: [AFOaKOM] Regime fights off graft claims against Biya son
From: Francis Njung <njungf@yahoo.com>
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Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2012 2:11 PM
Subject: [AFOaKOM] Regime fights off graft claims against Biya son
Why fight off claims, rather than let a Parliamentary probe, takes its normal course and a Judgement done on the matter proceudurally??? Regime fights off graft claims against Biya sonA senior Cameroon government official has said claims that President Paul Biya's son swindled millions from the state with impunity are [totally "unfounded" lies against an admirable young man.The allegations are part of a "macabre strategy" peddled by a covert yet well-known network of the president's opponents who have failed to beat him through the ballot box, according to Higher Education minister, Prof Jacques Fame Ndongo. "Franck Biya is a bright young man who is at odds with the economic ogre that some people want to link him with in the face of Cameroonians, in order to serve him as fodder for the predators or scavengers of history," Prof Ndongo said in a strongly worded opinion piece in Wednesday's issue of the ruling Cameroon People's Democratic Movement (CPDM) party's newspaper, L'Action. It is a futile attempt at convincing public opinion that Opération Épervier (Operation Sparrow Hawk), an anti-graft campaign the president launched in 2005, is just a political witch-hunt in no way linked to weeding out corruption, the minister who also serves as CPDM's communication secretary argues. State-run bilingual daily Cameroon Tribune carried the same one-page article on Tuesday. The allegations have gained widespread coverage and split local media down the middle since a local advocacy group petitioned MPs to probe Franck Emmanuel Olivier Biya. A pro-government weekly, Hot News, said the president's son was paying the price for being "discreet" and "generous". Leading French language daily Le Jour, which first broke the allegations as front page news on November 12 alongside L' Oeil du Sahel, said on Tuesday that the government was desperately seeking to counter the damning allegations. L'Action, which dedicated three pages in its Wednesday issue to defending the first son, also brought in two business law experts to prove that Franck Biya's dealings were duly legal. The Alliance for the Defence of Public Property, an advocacy group, says in 2006 the first son bilked more than FCFA 100 billion ($197 million) from the state when Cameroon was grappling with a messy liquidity crisis which started in 1997 and risked crippling the country. A vocal opposition MP, Jean Michel Nintcheu of the Social Democratic Front, has thrown his weight behind the petition by calling on government not to shrug off the accusations. Some other family members of the president who hold key positions in government and other senior officials are accused of having facilitated the fraud, which involved buying treasury bonds reportedly well below their prices and excessively overpricing them at resale. One of the greatest fears of those who back the petition, Prof Ndongo suggested, is that President Paul Biya could hand over power to his son. But he added: "Cameroon is not a monarchy. It is a democratic and liberal republic. Accession to the post of president follows rules laid down by the constitution," the minister says. 24 Responses to Regime fights off graft claims against Biya son
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There is nothing Kool about smoking. Though smoking is not a big problem in our community, our children are in danger of smoking. 20% of college children in the United States smoke. Watch what games your children are playing as tobacco companies are reaching them through video games. Watch out for new products like smokeless tobacco and free tobacco gifts. Are you and your children hanging around people who smoke? Second hand smoke is as dangerous as smoking. 80% of the one billion people who will die from tobacco in this century will be from poor countries like Cameroon. Protect your loved ones from tobacco.
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