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Cameroon main opposition leader Maurice Kamto released

Sunday October 06 2019
kamto

Cameroonian opposition leader Maurice Kamto sits in the back of a car as he is driven away on October 5, 2019, the day of his release from prison in Yaoundé. PHOTO | STRINGER | AFP

By AFP

YAOUNDÉ,

Cameroon's main opposition leader Maurice Kamto walked free from jail Saturday after a military court ordered his release at the behest of veteran President Paul Biya.

The opposition leader was released after nine months imprisonment following surprise conciliatory gestures from Biya, who is facing a number of domestic crises and international criticism over political freedoms.

"We are here today thanks to your constant support," Kamto told hundreds of supporters greeting him. "I saw you even when you couldn't see me."

He announced a "new chapter in our struggle", adding that "if some people think that our liberation means the end of our struggle they have understood nothing".

The struggle would be "peaceful", he said before being driven away surrounded by a dozen-strong escort of klaxon-blaring vehicles.

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Kamto, 65, was arrested in late January after months of peaceful opposition protests over the results of the October 2018 election.

Some 102 others in detention were also set for release "if they have not been detained for anything else," the military court said.

Biya, 86, who has ruled Cameroon with an iron fist for nearly 37 years, on Friday announced he had ordered prosecutions to be dropped against "some" opposition leaders, including a number from the main Movement for the Rebirth of Cameroon (MRC) which Kamto leads.

The dozens of others set for release include Biya's former economic advisor Christian Penda Ekoka, lawyer Michele Ndoki and well-known rapper Valsero, known for songs critical of the ruling establishment.

Amnesty International called Biya's decision "a welcome step towards ending the long repression of dissenting voices in Cameroon".

But the organisation also called on authorities to "go further by releasing all other individuals arbitrarily detained for having exercised their right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly".

Kamto went on trial with 88 others in a military court in September on charges of insurrection, hostility to the motherland and rebellion -- crimes which could carry the death penalty, though this is no longer carried out in Cameroon.

The opposition leader was greeted by dozens of cheering, dancing young people as he arrived at his home in a residential neighbourhood of Yaoundé following his release.

"Maurice Kamto, save us," the crowd chanted.

Most of those gathered were under 30 and, like around 75 percent of the population, would not have known another leader than Biya.

"We are tired of this system that has been in place for 37 years," said one protester, Abraham. "We want alternance in power. We want a new momentum for our country."

Biya's shock announcement Friday came on the closing day of crunch talks aimed at easing a bloody crisis in Cameroon's anglophone regions, which were shunned by the main separatist leaders.

The talks also ended with a proposal to give more autonomy to the English-speaking regions, where a two-year armed campaign for independence has been met with a brutal crackdown and cost nearly 3,000 lives, according to the International Crisis Group.

In addition, Biya had Thursday announced the shelving of an investigation and the release of 333 people detained during the crisis.

The two areas in western Cameroon -- the Northwest Region and Southwest Region -- are home to most of the country's anglophones, who account for about a fifth of a population that is overwhelmingly French-speaking.

A presidential statement Saturday said that "the head of state reaffirms his determination to pursue relentlessly his efforts seeking ways and means to resolve peaceably the crises and conflicts confronting our country".

The apparent change in Biya's approach comes after months of intransigence and follows international pressure.

Washington indicated in March that Yaoundé would do well to free Kamto -- a sentiment repeated since by the European Union and also France.

"The president is well aware that Cameroon is at a crossroads as it is dealing with important crises," Richard Makon, an expert on Cameroon politics, told AFP.

Born in the western town of Bafoussam on February 15, 1954, Kamto, is a former president of the UN International Law Commission which oversees codification of international law.

From 1996 to 2002 he was Cameroon's legal representative at the International Court of Justice, notably called to rule on a border dispute with neighbouring Nigeria. Cameroon ultimately was awarded sovereignty over the fish and oil-rich Bakassi Peninsula.

Biya rewarded him by making him minister delegate to the justice ministry in 2004 but he stepped down in 2011 and a year later took over the MRC, a party founded by change-hungry intellectuals.

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