Bamenda Human Rights Film and Arts Festival: Access to all screening sites and halls is free except for Franco-Alliance and the Bamenda City Council hall where tickets would be required for workers, teachers, top civil servants, NGO Leaders, and other categories of people working to support the sustainability of the festival. Contact: Tel: (237) 77 85 24 76/ 99 11 82 08, email: acommonfuture1@yahoo.com
Posters
Monday, July 23, 2012
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Monday, July 16, 2012
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Synopsis of the Films Selected
The 18 selected films for the festival are; Widows
@ War and WildLife Palavar produced and directed by Chop Samuel; Vice
& Virtue as well as Asoni directed by Keka Sylvester; Tears
from an Angel by Ihehon; Perverted Angel and Une Vie, Une
Histoire by Alfred Amandy, Elemo by Nchoutu Rami, The Evidence
by Ngato Noutosii, Before the Sunrise by Agbor Gilbert, Your Mother
My Wife by Molimi Cletus; The Woman’s World by Itambi Delphine, Atonement Calabash by Akuro Titus, Pension
by Nyincho James, The Storm by CHRAC, Thinking Out of the Man
Box by Anthony Porter, Rape and Incest produced by Aunties
Association and the German Technical Cooperation, GiZ.
Synopsis of some selected films:
WIDOWS AT WAR
Film by Sammuel Chop, 2012, 92,
subtitled in French.
The screening in the presence of
the producer shall be followed by a panel discussion.
Widows
At War depicts a culture of the North West Region of Cameroon in which when a
man dies his wife is given to any member of his family. In Widows At War, the
widows rebel and kick against the tradition and they want to marry the men they
like.
Mbong
losses her husband and denies to marry another man from her husband’s family.
She gets widows who enter into the bush and rebel against tradition.
The
Fon sends Juju which the widows seduce and in the end the widows plan and
kidnap a girl which was a favorite to the palace.
At
the end the widows conquer tradition and they all marry the men of their
choice.
BREAKING OUT OF “THE MAN BOX”
Documentary produced and directed
by Anthony Geathers of Wholly Moses productions USA, 2010, 45’
“Breaking Out of The Man Box” radically
challenges the socialization of men by examining the social norms, culture and
traditional images of manhood that has created an environment that supports,
tolerates and encourages men’s violence against women. The Founder of A Call to Men, Tony Porter and
Ted Bunch provide concrete solutions and practical approaches toward ending
violence against women by men in the United States of America. Insight
is provided into the construct of sexiom, challenging the privileges and
entitlements given to men by society. The documentary is unique in its ability
to be affirming and respectful to the experiences of women while expressing
genuine care and hope for men. Tony Porter and Ted Bunch invites “Well-Meaning”
men to leave sidelines of silence for the playing field of action in ending
violence against women. While “Breaking
Out of The Man Box” may force men out of our comfort zone, watching it
can lead us into the end zone of positive change in our relationships with
women, children, other men and ourselves”. It is a MUST-WATCH piece of work.
RAPE
Rape: break the
silence and denounce the rapists
Film, 32 mn, 2009
GTZ/RENATA
(French, English and
Pidgin)
In Cameroon,
rape affects 5.2% of girls and women. The victims are forced into silence by
their perpetrators or those around them. The National Network of Aunties Associations with support from the
German International Cooperation helps and guides the victims of rape. Four of
them, raped at age 8 or 11 years have decided to
break the silence by telling what happened to them by a thief, teacher,
neighbor or stepfather. A painful secret they have kept for long, but
which has not stopped haunting them many years later
5.2% of girls and women have been raped in Cameroon.
In total, these are 432.833 victims. 14% of girls and women have experienced
rape attempts. Among the victims, 18% (1 girl out of 5) were raped by a family member.
9% are victims of collective rape, i.e were raped by more than one person at a
time. Moreover, 11%of the victims were raped more than three times by different
persons. The victims are on average 15 years and12% of them are age 10 or
younger. Besides shock and trauma, 18% of the victims contracted a sexually transmitted
infection and 24% got pregnant as a result
of rape. The rapists are rarely punished: only 5% of therapists (1 out of 20)
are condemned by justice. The incidence of rape is exponentially increasing and
has a worrying and preoccupying tendency.
INCEST
Like
rape, incest remains a big problem in Cameroon. The North West has not been left out. This
documentary is a new campaign by the National Network of Aunties Association,
RENATA, to bring victims to speak out. The several women and girls tell their
stories with the intention of calling society’s attention to incest which is on
rise in Cameroon.
Today in Cameroon,
we are witnessing explosion of sexual attacks, targeting adolescents in
particular.
Vice and Virtue
Directed by Keka Sylvester
The
evil that men do lives with and after them. Megan is such a victim from her
mother’s past and God ceases to exist because he causes the rain to fall and
the sun to shine on the just and the unjust alike.
The
only narrow way to escape is to avenge but unfortunately, vengeance is of the
Lord.
But
now, how can a lost pride be recovered.
The Will
By Chop Samuel
This
is a situation where children succeed through matrilineal line. The man dies
leaving his will to the family. In his will, he stressed that his children will
succeed him.
Three
cousins come to fight over successionship. Ngonga who is an illiterate steals
the will and Peter who can read is looking for the will to change the name of
the successor and put his name.Chie is another illiterate who is trying to
succeed.
The
councilors sit down to solve the problem but drunk as they ask the cousins to
go and bring the dead man’s will.
At
the end the cousins get medicines and kill one of the children taking him for
the successor.
The
Gendarmes come and arrest the cousins.
Medicinal Wild Life Palaver
By Chop Samuel
The
Film deals with the protection of medicinal wild life. Nora has burns which can
only be treated by using the hair of a bush baby. The law is against the
killing of animals. Zama, the king hunter is
detained for hunting animals. Nora’s husband tries to make research and comes
out with the idea animals can be reared and used as food and for medicines.
The
king hunter, Zama is now released and the King
is made to educate the villagers on how to rear animals.
PEVERTED ANGEL
By Alfred
Amandy
Angel is an orphan .A Good Samaritan has taken her in
and brought her up, as his own. When she goes to campus, she gets involved with
the wrong company. Thereafter, she begins to date married men. It is a very
heart wrenching story.
THE STORMS OF THE LAND
The
social interactive Drama, titled “The Storms of the land” is aimed at encouraging
people to communicate with those in conflicts in order to facilitate the
reconciliation of their differences. It seeks to recognize the rights of
pastoralists to land and natural resources while stressing their responsibility
for active participation in community affairs. It seeks to improve Fulani’s
understanding of their rights. This play is blended with a series of campaigns
on basic human rights fundamental principles, HIV/AIDS, domestic violence against
women, child abuse, and exploitation. It is CHRAC’S working instrument for
managing farmer/grazer conflicts in the field.
Atonement Calabash
By Tikum Titus Akuro (Duration: 70
mins)
Sango
in his forties thought the only way he could put an end to a serious financial
problem was to kill himself. Little did he know that killing himself was
unavoidably going to multiply the financial problems and add curse to it.
Fru,
Sango’s only child wouldn’t take the shame of allowing his father hanging on a
rope because of no money to pay for Atonement rituals. Hence, he chose to bury
his father against all odds thereby invoking curses and more problems upon
himself. Subsequently, his fate became so precarious as only the Atonement
Calabash and the mercy of God could redeem him.
My Wife, Your Mother
Produced and Directed by Molimi
Cletus
Mrs Ngwa is very sick and it seems there is no money the husband Mr Ngwa has to go borrowing, her Children are all very sad thinking their mum will die because of lack of money, but what happens is that Mrs Ngwa actually has money but is refusing to help her Husband pay her bills, when the husband realizes this he puts her to the utmost test
which she of course failed resulting in her death
Thursday, July 12, 2012
SPOTLIGHT: Bamenda, our city as we know it!
Situated
366km North West of the administrative capital
of Cameroon, Yaounde, and about 450km of Cameroon’s
economic capital, Douala,
Bamenda, estimate to harbour some 500,000 breathing souls, has come to mean
more than one thing to many a keen observer.
At one time simple known as the land
where heroes come to die, today, Bamenda stands its own, tall among the
emerging towns of our triangle nation. It gained the status of a city on the
strength of a Presidential Decree of 17th January 2008, which
created the Bamenda City Council from the defunct Bamenda Urban Council,
bringing in as well the three Municipal Councils of Bamenda I, Bamenda II and
Bamenda III.
Senior translator and writer, Canute
C.N. Tangwa paints the picture of a city of two epochs in the following
TRAVELOGUE.
Bamenda
then and now:
Any day
and time I am bound for Bamenda, the gateway to the North West Region, I
remember the late Kotto Bass’s hit song dubbed, “Bamenda.” In the track, he
reels off the names of past and present captains of industry and politics as
well as custodians of tradition and culture (Fons) from the North West.
As we slowly but surely descended
the Station Hill, Peter Essoka’s question, “who is the Bamenda man,” and Julius
Wamey’s terse response flickered through my mind. It did not die because Jomia
Pefok’s wise crack that the Bamenda is a law abiding citizen but very sensitive
to injustice kept me thinking. Indeed, with kaleidoscopic precision, images of
Bamenda during my stay at CCAST Bambili kept surging and rested on bell Luc
Rene’s crisp and riveting description of the mindset of the Bamenda man over
the CRTC programme, Actualité Hebdo:
a formidable go-getter with a penchant for detail.
I looked down as usual to catch a
glimpse of downtown Bamenda. It was dark except for pockets of lit-up areas! I
held my breath. In the good days, any visitor took in, sized up and appreciated
Abakwa from the Station Hill. “Quelle beauté”, a friend of mine exclaimed in
1989.
The decay was knee-dip and shouting.
We sped past Finance Junction and slowed down at Ngeng Junction, not because of
traffic jam but of the deplorable state of the road. We swung towards SONAC Street hoping
to catch the usual night revelers around former Zenon or so. Since there was no
action around there, we moved on to the famous Commercial Avenue. There was not hustle,
no snack bar, no cabaret life… nothing! Bamenda used to wake up one a Friday as
from 9pm till dawn. Very few businesses could afford power generating sets so
they had to adopt break-even measures like closing early.
Formerly, we could have been spoilt
for choice as to which night club, cabaret, snack or joint to go to,
particularly along the Commercial
Avenue. We met a semi-desert, dark and poorly lit Commercial Avenue
and town. Someone proposed Dallas.
We did not hesitate and had to maneuver to get there for the road was an
eyesore. The ambiance was fairly good, the music below par for guys cruising in
from Douala;
the services were satisfactory and the call girls aplenty. We guzzled beer and
listened to jarring renditions of tunes or hit songs of yesteryears.
Then I spotted my younger brother,
an excellent ball juggler-termed- developer, some distance away from the
Government Delegate of the Bamenda City Council. He electrified the atmosphere.
Booze flowed and there was mirth.
At around 3am we decided to retire.
But our intestines had already started complaining. We badly needed a bite. We
began a frantic search. Every available restaurant was closed. Fortunately,
there was this lady around former Black and White night Club at Nkwen who
operated an open air cafeteria. We went down to business and retired to our
various abodes with the hope seeing Abakwa by day.
When we met the following day
everyone commented on our night experience. Two of my friends who lodged at
Ayaba had a bizarre story to tell. The lifts were seemingly not operational. At
Le Bien, the proprietor had to make do with a generator but at a price for the
visitor: lights-out after 11pm!
Bamenda by day looked like a
battered truck in need of urgent repairs. It had been buffeted by the New Deal,
the wind of change, “scratch my back and I scratch your back” brand of
politics, socio-economic neglect and opposition politics. Seemingly, Bamenda
was paying the wage of being an opposition town. The intrepid Ntemfac Ofege
stated clearly that when the 1999/2000 State budget was CFA 1,100 billion, the
North West got less than 2% of the total revenue!.
I decided to board a motorbike
(bendskin), in order to beat the traffic jam at Nkwen, for the Bamenda
mortuary. From Ndamukong Street,
we rode through Mile 2 Nkwen, down towards the former Rota
snack bar and veered towards Cow
Street through Ngeng Junction, City Chemist
Roundabout towards the market and took a short cut to the mortuary. From the
mortuary, the “bendskin” made a detour via Ntamulung. Two Bridge and unto
Nkwen. From thereon we sped to Bob Fula Junction in Ndamukong Street. I saw what the French
term, “Bamenda Profound”: poor road infrastructure and underdevelopment.
Bamenda
now
Indeed, that was Bamenda then.
Bamenda now looks like a serpent that has sloughed off its skin someone has
given Bamenda the Midas’s touch! In Cameroon, it has gained currency:
where the Head of State passes, development follows. Bamenda will receive the
Head of State, President Paul Biya, for the 50th anniversary of our
valiant Armed Forces. Thus, pot holes have been filled, roads have received a
facelift, the street light are on, hotels are being refurbished and built,
cabarets, nightclubs and snacks have come to life, streets are swept clean,
there is an expected construction of a thermal power plant, and business seems
to be moving in the right direction with the imminent construction of the
Bamenda-Enugu road. Apparently, the Bamenda man looks set to seize this
opportunity: the resilience, hope, potential and possibility are seemingly
back.
Shandie Shing Av wontom captures the
new Bamenda spirit when he states, interalia; “Bamenda … will be the terminal
of the main road with the Nigerian giant, a tractor and bus assembly plant will
soon be built in Mile 4 Nkwen for the West African market, a State University
may be underway, Azire and Police Credit Unions are the largest Credit Unions
in Central Africa, not to talk of the vast potential of its qualified people
and its experience from all over the world who are rushing back to have a foot
in Abakwa. And there is more!
THE NORTH WEST MEDIA: AN EXCITING PHONOMENON
Bamenda |
The significance of the press lies
in its function as the mirror of society. There are only two things to do when
standing face to face with the mirror-adjust or break the mirror.
The press in the North West is more than just vibrant; it is
electrifying in its reporting and truly reflects the very active (volatile)
nature of the North Westerner Bamenda town alone has six FM Radio Stations.
They are Afrique Nouvelle, Abakwa FM, Radio Hot cocoa, Foundation Radio,
Christian Gospel Radio and CBC radio. There are six Community Radio Stations;
Ngoketunjia FM, Oku Community Radio, Savannah Radio-Nkambe, Bui Community
Radio, Donga-Mantung Community Radio and Batibo Community Road. There are also
three TV Stations operating from Bamenda. Cameroon National Television (CNTV),
Republican Television Network (RTN) and Horizon TV Stations operating from
Bamenda. Cameroon
National Television (CNTV), Republican Television Network (RTN) and Horizon TV.
Private newspapers operating from Bamenda include Chronicle, The Watchdog
Tribune, The Herald Tribune, Frontier Telegraph, The Vanguard, World Echoes,
The Reporter, The Eye, Cameroon Post International, Life Time, The Pilot and of
recent, Day Break and Independent Observer. Other publications in newsletter
form are, however, enriched by regular newspapers with headquarters elsewhere.
There are as well the dailies. Cameroon Tribune, and Le Jour, with headquarters
in Yaounde; the
bi-weeklies: The Post and Eden, with headquarters in Buea and Limbe respectively.
The Guardian Post is another widely-read newspaper; it is a weekly with head
office in Yaounde.
Others are The Star, The Spokesman, City Times, Cameroon Now and Cameroon
Express.
Many of these newspapers are like kolanuts.
Nobody knows when a kola nut would fall from the tree. Just as in every popular
profession, there are guards and charlatans. You see the latter at almost all
public occasions brandishing recorders or conducting interviews which are never
published. The North West Governor calls them Ayaba journalists, just like
Hilton journalists in Yaounde.
Even some of those who publish occasionally are also involved in the unenviable
practice of harassing politicians and other newsmakers for money, popularly
nicknamed “gombo.” The most derogatory term ever used on such journalists came
from former Governor of the North
West, Kumpa Issa. He once described them as coupeurs de routes (highway robbers).
This was when some of them tried to obstruct a visiting Minister whom the
Governor was accompanying to Bafut.
Cameroonians, as a rule, do more
listening to the radio and watching television. North Westerners are, however,
among the most informed Cameroonians. There are yet another group of persons
who excel in misinformation because they are not informed themselves. They are
always at the newsstands, not to buy newspapers but to peruse through headlines
and later pose as political schoolmasters in beer and palm wine houses.
Even more dangerous to the
communication landscape are publishers of newspapers without a fixed editorial
policy. For instance, the person they carry to heaven on the wings of panegyric
in one edition is the same one they damn as a rogue in the very next, and they
do not think they owe the reader and explanation for that.
The vibrancy in the North West media is
further demonstrated by the activities of the Cameroon Association of English
Speaking Journalists (CAMASEJ). Apart from the fact that the North West chapter of CAMASEJ holds monthly
meetings and educates members on the tenets of the profession, it organizes
scholarship awards for meritorious GCE candidates.
Janet Garvey, out-gone US ambassador to Cameroon, left with a very positive
impression of North West CAMASEJ, which she communed with more than once. The
same was the impression of Maryline Green, a Canadian media expert. The
vibrancy in the North West
press reflects the vibrancy of democracy and human rights in the region.
Bamenda, the citadel of Modern Education
When
the learned Professor Emeritus Bernard Fonlon was ridiculed by a contemporary
because he did not have houses like his friends, he answered: “You build
houses, but I build men”.
The learned philosopher’s reply sums
up the whole value of education. Every sensible human being knows that the best
assets a parent can give their offspring is a sound education. Educating a
child is putting up sky scrapers in his mind.
If there is any species of
Cameroonian, who upholds this lofty principle, it is the Bamenda man. The North West parent would
rather eat food without oil, or move about in rags than allow their child to
stay at home. This further explains why the Parent Teacher Association, PTA,
puts up infrastructure in schools and even employs and pays auxiliary staff.
But a greater proof of a Bamenda
man’s attachment to education is the number of private higher institutions in
Bamenda. There is the Bamenda University of Science and Technology, BUST, which
is graduating students up to the Masters Degree. Some of these students come
from neighboring Nigeria and
Equatorial Guinea.
Then there is the National Polytechnic in Bambui, of one multi-talented Bobe
Francis Young. National Polytechnique Bambui has graduated students in various
useful disciplines including Journalism and Computer Science. Like BUST, it has
numerous students from Equatorial
Guinea. There is also FANAB, of Dr. Peter
Fonche, a science researcher. Recently, the Catholic and Presbyterian Churches
also heeded the call for quality education by creating two Universities. These
are: The Catholic University, with campus in Nkwen; and the Christian University
with campus in Bali. Bambili has the ENS,
First and Second Cycles, as well as the Higher Teachers; Technical College.
Despite the existence of these institutions of higher learning.
At the level of academic
performance, the North West
is exemplary. The best results at the GCE, as well as in technical education,
are usually produced by the North
West. Students from other Regions, who do not perform
well or think they could do better, travel to study in the North West because of the conducive academic
environment. Discipline and moral education are values which have inspired
parents in most parts of Cameroon
to send their children to study in the North
West. Schools like Sacred Heart College Mankon, St.
Bebe’s College Ashing, Our Lady of Lourdes and P.S.S. Mankon are models. The
quality of education in the North
West is enhanced by the activities of the Cameroon
Teacher’s Trade Union, CATTU. The most dynamic Teachers Trade Union in Cameroon, CATTU
has its headquarters in Bamenda and is headed by the fearless, no-nonsense
Simon Nkwenti.
TOURISM / TRAVEL AGENCIES
v Amour
Mezam inter-urban Transport Agency
v Symbol
of Unity Travel and Tourism Agency
v Vatican
Inter-Urban Transport Agency
v Mondial
Inter-Urban Transport Agency
v Guarantee
Inter-Urban Transport Agency
v Jeanot
Inter-Urban Transport Agency
v Mazi
Inter-Urban Transport Agency
v Patience
Inter-Urban Transport Agency
v Mar-Tourism-
Reservation / Guide
v Eco-travel
and Tourism Agency- Reservations
v Laro-Tourism-Reservations
v Zwinkels
Tours Cameroon
– Ticketing, Guide & Reservations
v Holywood
Travel – Ticketing, Reservations, Guide
v NADED Tours – Ticketing,
Reservations and Guides.
USEFUL HEALTH FACILITIES IN BAMENDA
v Regional Hospital Bamenda
v PMI
Nkwen
v Karen
Pharmacy-Nkwen
v Vilen
Pharmacy – Nkwen
v Crystal
Pharmacy
v Corporate
Pharmacy
v San
Paolo Pharmacy
v City
Chemist Pharmacy
v Professional Plaza Pharmacy, Commercial Avenue
v Millennium
Pharmacy, Savannah Street
v Mezam
Pharmacy
v Noble
Pharmacy
v Amen
Pharmacy
v Sacred
heart Pharmacy
v Black
Star Pharmacy
v Park
Pharmacy
v Adeso
Clinic
v Saint
Blaise Hospital
v Saint Mary
Hospital
v St. Louis Clinic
v World Hospital Up Station
v Mbingo Baptist Hospital
v St.
Martin de Porres Catholic Hospital Njinikom
v Banso Baptist Hospital.
v Shisong Cardiac Center
for Central Africa.
USEFUL ADDRESS
Regional Hospital Bamenda
Tel: 33
36 21 87
Gendarmerie
Bamenda
Tel: 33
36 11 52
Public
Security Bamenda
Tel: 33
36 12 09
Fire
Fighters Brigade
Tel:
118/ 18
Regional
Delegation National Security
Tel: 22
26 12 09
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