Cameroonian demonstrators in Belgium demand President Biya step down and release all political prisoners.
Photo by Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Anglophone grievances run deep and have remained unaddressed for a long time.
‘No worries’: this Australian slang was popularised in the 1980s by the hugely popular comedy film, Crocodile Dundee.
Allstar Picture Library Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo
An American university has banned the expression ‘no worries’. Here are some other words and phrases that confuse speakers of different versions of English.
According to a recent survey of public servants by the Commissioner of Official Languages, more than 44 per cent of French-speakers are uncomfortable using French at work.
CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
A recent survey reveals a general uneasiness about using French among both francophone and anglophone public servants in administrative regions where bilingualism is required.
A woman casts her ballot during Cameroon’s 2018 presidential elections.
Nic Bothma/EPA
In many instances, social media appears to be amplifying violence, creating a culture of impunity when perpetrators are not held accountable, and increasing insecurity and suspicion.
Cameroon’s President Paul Biya being sworn in for a seventh consecutive term on the 6th November 2018.
EPA-EFE/Etienne MainimoO
West African leaders have nursed the idea of a common currency for the sub-region since the turn of the century. But conditions for member countries to make this happen appear unattainable.