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Showing posts from August, 2016

Natural Resources for Sustainable Development

Natural Resources for Sustainable Development : Natural Resources for Sustainable Development: The Fundamentals of Oil, Gas, and Mining Governance, a joint course by the Natural Resource Governance Institute, the Columbia Center on Sustainable...

Bamenda Trader's Strike: Ndumu Vincent Blames Unscrupulous Middlemen

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“A senseless strike!” Vincent Ndumu Nji, Government Delegate. Bamenda City Council Mr Government Delegate, during the traders’ strike of 12 July over increased market shed rents, you were in a conference in London. So, how did you feel when you got the information? Well, I felt a little bit worried in the sense that, you can easily agree with me that it was a senseless strike! The first thing about it is that, as a business man operating within the premises of a municipality, when you go on strike, the strike should be about something beneficial to you, because closing your shop or activities for one day causes you to lose money. Secondly, we had had a lot of discussions with the representatives of the traders of all the four markets here. All of us agreed on the necessity, given the means that are required to run this market, to bring up some of the market rents to the minimum official rates provided by the 2009 law on council fiscal revenue. So, I say it was surprising in the se

Tourism for All: A Trip to Njikwa

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Njikwa Council Njikwa Council area corresponds to Njikwa Sub Division in Momo Division, North West Region. Like its sister councils in Momo, it lies astride the savannah of the Western Highlands and the forest belt of the South West of Cameroon. The main town, Njikwa, lies about 64km from Bamenda, some 40 km from Mbengwi, the divisional headquarters of Momo. Njikwa Council shares its boundaries with Menchum Division in the north, Mezam Division and Mbengwi Central Sub Division in the east, Widikum Sub Division in the West and Ngie Sub Division in the South. The surface area of the Sub Division is about 685 km², for a population of 16,634. Historically, Njikwa Council used to constitute part of the defunct Momo Council Union that also included Mbengwi, Batibo, Ngie and Widikum. Today, the council executive is led by Mayor Itambi Tagyen Andrew. The council has 25 councillors Peopling and Economic Activities Njikwa is made up of 09 villages: Oshie, Ngwo, in the South, then Konda,

Post Card From Isangele

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Isangele Council is located in the Ndian Division in South West Region. It is privileged to be among the 18 councils out of 360 with a female mayor at their helm. It is also privileged to be located at the border, at the crossroads between Cameroon and Nigeria. As such, its population is a melting pot of ethnicities, not only from these two nations, but also from other West African countries attracted to its rich fisheries. A building scheme in Isangele: Solving the housing problem. Created on june 29, 1977, this Council 765 km² Isangele Council has a population of 5,000 inhabitants and is governed by a council of 22, under the leadership of Caroline Offiong Usim. It is bounded in the north by Mundemba council, in the south by Kombo Abedimo council, in the west by the Atlantic Ocean  and in the east by Ekondo Titi and Kombo Itindi council areas. This is the parent council of the Bakassi Area, with offshoots being the Kombo Itindi and Idabato Councils. The main settlement