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Italian police on Thursday said 12 African migrants had died after being thrown overboard by fellow passengers in the latest high-seas tragedy in the Mediterranean, as another 41 boat migrants were feared drowned in a separate incident.
Police in Palermo, Sicily, said they had arrested 15 Muslim migrants suspected of attacking Christian passengers after a religious row on a boat headed for Italy, which is struggling to cope with a huge spike in illegal migrants arriving on its shores.
The 12 victims were all Nigerians and Ghanaians while the 15 suspects came from Senegal, Mali and Ivory Coast. They were charged with “multiple aggravated murder motivated by religious hate,” according to a police statement.
Distraught survivors, who set off from Libya on Tuesday before being rescued by an Italian vessel on Wednesday, told a “dreadful” story of “forcefully resisting attempts to drown them, forming a veritable human chain in some cases,” police said.
In another drama, 41 migrants were missing feared drowned on after their dinghy sank en route to Italy, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said, mere days after 400 migrants are believed to have died in another shipwreck off the coast of Libya.
The four survivors in Thursday’s shipwreck, who came from Nigeria, Ghana and Niger, said their boat sank after setting sail from Libya with 45 people on board.
Their vessel was spotted by a plane, which alerted the Italian coastguard, but by the time a navy ship arrived to help them only four passengers were found alive.
The latest deaths bring the number of migrants killed while trying to cross the Mediterranean this year up to 900, the IOM said, up from 96 between January and April last year.
The agency said some 10,000 people had been rescued off Italy since Friday alone, with recent good weather prompting a spike in the number of boat migrants attempting the risky crossing, many of them fleeing conflict and poverty in Africa and the Middle East.
The number of people trying to reach Italy in recent days has been “extraordinary”, IOM’s Giovanni Abbate said in the Sicilian port of Augusta, where more new arrivals were disembarking.
Driven by desperation and undertaking a perilous journey, he said it was not the first time disputes between migrants on packed boats had turned deadly, in reference to the 12 Christians allegedly thrown overboard.
“Terrible tensions can arise, anything can happen,” he said.
The IOM in a statement said it had received reports of “a fight between different groups — maybe for religious reasons ... on one of the boats rescued some days ago”.
Nigerian and Ghanaian survivors told police a group of Muslim passengers on the boat, which was carrying around 100 people, began threatening the Nigerians and Ghanaians after they declared themselves to be Christians.
“The threats then materialised and 12 people, all Nigerian and Ghanaian, are believed to have drowned in the Mediterranean,” the police statement added.
Italy pleaded for more help Thursday from other European Union countries to rescue the migrants and share the burden of accommodating them.
Italy is not the final destination for most of those who risk their lives each year in search of a better life in Europe, but as their first port of call it is saddled with handling all asylum requests as well as saving those in danger drowning.
“Ninety per cent of the cost of the patrol and sea rescue operations are falling on our shoulders, and we have not had an adequate response from the EU,” Paolo Gentiloni, the Italian foreign minister, told the daily Corriere della Sera.
“Then there is the difficult issue of knowing where to send those rescued at sea — to the nearest port? To the country where their boat came from? The EU has to respond clearly to these questions,” Mr Gentiloni said.
The crisis is only expected to intensify, with the Red Cross predicting record numbers of boat migrants this year.
“The flow is unstoppable, and we, the international community, are failing to deliver on our commitments,” said Francesco Rocca, president of the Italian Red Cross.
Amnesty International said it had been raising the alarm “for months” and urged European leaders to take action.
“A season of death is now upon us,” said Gauri van Gulik, the rights group’s deputy Europe and Central Asia programme director.
“It is an appalling indictment of European governments’ lack of compassion that so little has been done when so many people remain at risk of dying off Europe’s southern shores.”
* Agence France-Presse
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- Ngwa Bertrand
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Three young hunters from the Kupe Muanenguba constituency in the South West region of Cameroon have discovered the wreckage of a plane carrying a US citizen Bill Fitzpatrick that mysteriously disappeared on June 23, 2014 over Western Bakossi territory. Cameroon Concord understands Bill Fitzpatrick's skeleton and the rubble of Cessna 172 one seat plane was found on Friday, April 10, 2015 in the locality of Eboko Bajo in Tombel Subdivision.
The three hunters reportedly used their phone cameras and filmed the remains of the late US citizen and handed it to local security officials who rushed to the scene and confirmed the information. At the time of writing this report, information filtered that the Delegate General for National Security has dispatched a team of Cameroon forensic experts to Tombel.
Bill Fitzpatrick, 59, was flying from Kano, Nigeria to Douala, Cameroon en route to Odzala-Kokoua National Park in the Congo.
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- Ngwa Bertrand
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Cameroon Anglophone Lawyers have hinted that an All Anglophone Lawyers Conference is to hold soonest in Bamenda, the chief city in the North West region. Cameroon Concord gathered the conference is to develop strategies at safeguarding the Common Law and also to map out the way forward for the Southern Cameroons territory. Our senior intelligence officer in Yaoundé who contributed to this report observed that a major campaign has been launched to drum up support from all Common Law practitioners deep within Southern Cameroons and also in La Republique.
Cameroon Concord understands the CPDM crime syndicate has harsh a diabolic plot geared towards stifling the Common Law system in Cameroon. The Bamenda meeting will provide a rare opportunity for the Anglophone Lawyers to sound a note of caution to the government to respect the bi-jural nature of Cameroon or face severe consequences. Speaking to the media recently, Eta Bissong, former Bar Council President revealed that "The President of the General Assembly of the Bar and the President of the Bar Council do not speak for lawyers with a Common Law background".
Barrister Harmony Bobga was also quoted as saying, "The struggle of the Anglophone Lawyers is to preserve the Anglophone identity from completely being wiped out". A reliable source told this reporter that the Cameroon Anglophone Lawyers conference may take place between April 29 and May the 2nd.
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- Ngwa Bertrand
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Spain denies asylum request by Cameroonian woman who claims she is at risk of being sent to prison because of her homosexuality
Spain has denied an asylum request by a Cameroonian woman who claims she is at risk of being sent to prison because of her homosexuality.
Christelle Nangnou, a 28-year-old from Yaoundé, is being held in Madrid’s Barajas airport awaiting repatriation, something she says she has physically resisted several times.
“If I go back, I will be sent to prison for my sexuality,” Ms Nangnou said on Monday via the payphone in the secure wing of the airport where she has been kept since arriving on a flight from Cameroon on March 25.
In Cameroon homosexuality is illegal, typically carrying a prison sentence of five years in prison.
Ms Nangnou said that a newspaper article last year identified her as the leader of a group of gay women, leading to police visiting her house.
The police visit alerted her family to her sexuality, something she had kept secret. “My mother did not know that I was homosexual. She said she couldn’t believe I did those things. In Cameroon parents feel ashamed of having a child like that.”
Ms Nangnou said her father died in 2005.
Ms Nangnou said she earned a living selling jewellery before she decided to flee the country to escape arrest, using another person’s identification card to exit Cameroon.
On arrival at Barajas airport she requested asylum, but was refused. Her lawyer in Spain, Eduardo Gómez Cuadrado, said the asylum authorities at Barajas claimed that her “story was not credible” and that there have been three attempts to repatriate her and on one occasion she was placed on a plane.
“But her resistance was such that the pilot refused to fly with her on board. She has a wound on her eyebrow and a smashed fingernail and she says she feels beaten up all over after so many physical struggles. She is physically and mentally exhausted,” Mr Gómez said.
Mr Gómez has appealed to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in the hope that the Strasbourg tribunal will block Ms Nangnou’s repatriation while her appeal can be heard.
“Everyone has the right to appeal an administrative or judicial decision,” Mr Gómez said. “Otherwise, she could be repatriated only to find out in a couple of years that she was right. But then it would be too late.”
The ECHR has stayed any expulsion order on Ms Nangnou until April 17, giving her Madrid lawyer more time to present a case.
According to Paloma Favieres, an expert on asylum law from the Spanish Commission for Refugees (CEAR), Spain’s legislation on asylum was updated in 2009 to specifically include sexual orientation as a cause of persecution.
“There have been positive cases since then. It is very difficult to prove one’s sexuality but the authorities must look at the objective situation of the country concerned.”
Ms Favieres said the existence of laws against homosexuality should be sufficient to show evidence of possible persecution, which would allow a person’s request to be processed and not rejected outright.
Spain’s interior ministry said it could not discuss individual cases.
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- Ngwa Bertrand
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(Reuters) - French oil services company Bourbon said on Monday that three Nigerian crew members had been kidnapped after one of its speedboats was boarded off the Nigerian coast in the night of April 8.
"An emergency unit based in Nigeria has been immediately activated," the company said in a statement.
Bourbon operates a fleet of light, fast cruisers it calls Surfers that are used to move professionals to offshore oil and gas sites, especially in West Africa.
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- Ngwa Bertrand
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