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Arbitrary Arrest
and
Continued Detention
of
Kingsley Ashu
is
Political
and
Unacceptable
The Cameroon Center for Democracy and Human Rights
(CCDHR) is calling for the immediate and
unconditional release of Kingsley Ndip Ashu,
arrested on February 23, 2011 in the city of Kumba,
South West Region of the Republic of Cameroon.
Kingsley, a young civil society activist and former
University of Buea student leader has been
languishing in the Kumba central prison without bail for more than a
month on the bogus charge of misinforming officers
of law and order about his place of birth and
possession of falsified documents.
Motivated by successful peaceful demonstrations in
Tunisia and Egypt, some political leaders and civil
society groups had called on Cameroonians to go to
the street on February 23, 2011 to demand freedom,
democracy, respect for human rights, free and fair
elections, and for the resignation of Paul Biya who
has been in power for 29 years. On the said day,
Kingsley stood in front of a popular news stand in
Kumba where he engaged in discussions with other
denizens of Kumba on the Tunisian and Egyptian
uprisings, and the possibility of it happening in
Cameroon. This gathering drew increasing number of
people, and the police which was already on high
alert because of the planned demonstration got
involved, and arrested Kingsley for inciting public
disorder and insulting the Head of State, Paul Biya.
Upon discovering later that Kingsley’s birth
certificate and national identification card carry
difference places of birth, Buea and Eyumojock
respectively, the Government shamefully dropped the
original charge of inciting public disorder and
insulting Paul Biya for which Kingsley was
originally arrested. He has now been charged with
misleading uniform officers with falsify documents
and has been held without bail for more than a
month. It must be noted that the documents in
question (birth certificate and identification card)
are officially issued government documents, and
while the places of birth on both documents are
contradictory, none of these documents is forged. In
addition, Kingsley has argued that the error on his
identification card had been made by the issuing
authority not him, and that steps were already being
taken to correct that error. Meanwhile, the
incongruousness of the offence in question and the
treatment Kingsley is being subjected to supports
the suggestion of a politically endorsed action
against Kingsley Ashu rather than the mere
application of the law.
It must be recalled that under the leadership of the
University of Buea Student Union, the students of
the University of Buea in November 2006 took to the
streets in opposition to the corrupt educational
practices by the Minister of Higher Education in
connivance with the University of Buea authorities.
The demonstrations followed impropriety in the
selection process into the School of Medicine at the
University of Buea and was sparked by the imposition
of a list of 153 candidates selected for interview
as part of the admission process into the School of
Medicine. The list of 153 candidates, which was
signed by the Minister of Higher Education, was
inconsistent with the list of 127 successful
certified examinees previously signed and published
by the Vice Chancellor of the University of Buea.
The Minister’s list was inflated with 26 new names
most of whom had not even sat for the entrance exam
into the School of Medicine at the University of
Buea. Among the leaders of this vigorous stand
against the Government of Cameroon was Kingsley Ndip
Ashu, the then Vice-President in charge of Economic
Affairs of the University of Buea Student Union.
Kingsley is being held against his will by the
Government of Cameroon for political reasons rather
than the spurious claim of misinforming uniform
officers about his place of birth. His arrest,
denial of bail, and continued detention appears to
be an act of retaliation against this young and
bright Cameroonian, who along with his brave
colleagues of the University of Buea Student Union,
exposed the corrupt practices of the Government of
Cameroon in its fraudulent meddling with university
admissions. CCDHR is very concerned about the physical
and mental status of Kingsley Ashu. His arrest and
detention is in violation of Section 30 (4) of the
Criminal Procedure Code which
states that:
“No bodily or psychological harm shall be caused to
the person arrested”.
Since his arrest on February 23, 2011, the
administration continues to play with time by
continuously adjourning his arraignment before a
court of law, thereby subjecting him to various
forms of psychological torments in an effort to
break his will and force him to refrain from ever
again engaging in criticism against the Government
of Cameroon.
In addition, the detention of Kingsley Ashu under
deplorable prison conditions continues to be in
violation of Section 37 of the Criminal Procedure
Code which states that:
"Any person arrested shall be given reasonable
facilities in particular to be in contact with his
family, obtain legal advice, make arrangements for
his defence, consult a doctor and receive medical
treatment and take necessary steps to obtain his
release on bail".
Since his arrest, Kingsley has not been afforded
access to medical care even though he has sustained
injuries from being assaulted in prison, and the
defence motion to get his release on bail has not
been entertained because of a deliberate delaying
tactic by the regime in Cameroon as they plot
strategies to victimize and make a scapegoat of this
young Cameroonian for no justified reason. CCDHR
would like to express its legitimate fears that
because of the
political nature of this case,
Kingsley’s chances of a fair trail before the
Cameroonian judiciary are slim to nothing.
In Cameroon, the President appoints all prosecutors,
judges, and other officers of the judiciary. He
equally guarantees the independence of the
judiciary, and as we have seen in Cameroon, this
means that the government is given a free ride to
trample on the rights of its citizens as judicial
recourse in situations of human rights violations is
almost always nonexistent.
CCDHR is requisitioning the Government of Cameroon
to immediately and unconditionally release Kingsley
Ndip Ashu and other political prisoners across
Cameroon for the sake of respect for human rights.
The Government of Cameroon needs to be conscious of
its obligation towards its people, and respect their
rights to hold opinion and freely express their
opinion without fear of reprisal. The action of
Kingsley Ashu on the day of February 23, 2011 falls
squarely within the ambits of constitutionally
guaranteed and internationally recognized human
rights. The Government of Cameroon must respect the
laws of the country and adhere to international
standards guaranteeing the rights to freedom of
expression. Ambushing people who hold opinions
different from that of the regime is a tendency only
favored by dictators because they have no facts to
proof their allegations except through force and
judicial fraud. CCDHR is also calling on
Cameroonians across the world and sympathizers of
victims of human rights violations in Cameroon to
give the case of Kingsley Ashu the widest publicity
so as to pressure the Government of Cameroon to
release him and refrain from persecuting Kingsley or
any others in the future barely because they express
themselves. |