AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
13 October 2017
Inmates ‘packed like sardines’ in overcrowded prisons following
Anglophone protests
• More than 500 people detained in towns including Bamenda and
Buea
• Wounded protestors flee hospitals for fear of arrest
• Arrested protestors forced to pay 60 USD bribe to be released
At least 500 people remain detained in overcrowded detention
facilities following mass arbitrary arrests in the Anglophone regions of
Cameroon, and many wounded protestors fled hospitals to avoid arrest, Amnesty
International said today.
Those detained were arrested following protests in dozens
of towns in North-West and South-West Cameroon on 1 October, in which more than
20 people were unlawfully shot dead by security forces.
“This mass arrest of protestors, most of whom were acting
peacefully, is not only a violation of human rights, but is also likely to be
counter-productive,” said Ilaria Allegrozzi, Amnesty International’s Lake Chad
researcher.
“The Cameroonian authorities should release anyone
detained only for exercising their right to peaceful protest.”
The arrests took place in towns across the regions. In
Bamenda, the capital of the North-West Region, at least 200 people were
arrested and the majority transferred to the prison in Bafoussam.
In Buea, the capital of the South-West region, at least
300 people have been arrested since the 1st October protests, including a
series of mass arbitrary arrests between 6 and 8 October.
On Sunday 8
October, for example, police arrested up to 100 people walking to church in the
Mile 16 area of Buea, and entered the building to arrest church staff. Some
have now been released.
Security forces including the army – whose deployment for
law-enforcement purpose should only be an exceptional measure in an emergency
situation - have also used unnecessary or excessive force when conducting
arrests, and have destroyed property and looted belongings.
In one incident on 3 October in Buea, a police officer
threw a teargas canister into a vehicle containing a dozen protestors, who had
to smash the window to let in air. In all the cases documented by Amnesty
International, arrests were carried out without warrants.
Charged with secession
Eyewitnesses described how prisons have become overcrowded
following the wave of arrests. In Buea the prison population has increased from
about 1,000 before 22 September to around 1,500 today. In one facility run by a
mobile police unit, the Groupement Mobile d’Intervention (GMI), in Buea,
detainees were described as being “packed like sardines”.
Some of those arrested have been charged with secession,
and others with charges including not possessing identity papers, destruction
of public property or failure to respect order of the governor. Some have
already been brought before the courts. Others were released following the
payment of bribes, with families in Buea reporting to have paid members of the
police approximately 60 USD for each family member detained.
Wounded protestors fleeing hospitals
The fear of arrest and large-scale deployment of security
forces also led to dozens of wounded protestors fleeing hospitals where they
had sought treatment after being shot during demonstrations, putting their
lives at risk. In at least one hospital, security forces entered the building
to arrest patients.
Gathering information from families, eyewitnesses, lawyers
and medical centres across the regions, Amnesty International has learnt that
in at least nine hospitals people with serious injuries fled before their
treatment was finished, have been picked up by families, or have asked to be
discharged against the advice of medical staff, because of the fear of arrest.
In one such case, a young man who was left with multiple
fractures after being shot in both legs by member of the armed forces was taken
home by his family before he could be stabilised. According to a doctor
treating the patient, “he had lost more than a litre of blood. I do not know
whether he is still alive, he may likely die”.
Climate of fear
Another medic told Amnesty International: “Some of our patients run away from hospital
even before getting stabilized, out of fear that the police would come to
arrest them”.
A third medic told the organisation that security forces
did not allow him and other doctors to examine the corpses to clinically
confirm that they had been shot.
In another case a young man was killed just outside of the
hospital, shot in the back of the head by security forces while running away a
protest. Bullets hit the walls of the hospital, penetrating into a room where a
doctor and nurses were operating.
“The climate of fear in the Anglophone regions could lead
to even more people dying of their wounds, too scared to seek the medical
treatment they so desperately need,” said Ilaria Allegrozzi.
“The security forces should put an end to the arbitrary
arrest of protestors and permit that those injured are able to seek treatment
without fear. International organisations should also deploy human rights
monitors and medical staff to assess the situation and provide emergency care.”
For more information please call Amnesty International's
press office in Dakar, Senegal, +221 77 658 62 27 or +221 33 869 82 31; Email:
sadibou.marong@amnesty.org
Twitter: @AmnestyWaro
Sadibou MARONG
Regional Media Manager
Amnesty International West and Central Africa Office
Immeuble Seydi Djamil, 3e étage
Avenue Cheikh Anta Diop x 3 rue Leo
Frobenus
P.O. Box 47582
Dakar, Senegal
Tel direct: +221 33 869 82 31
Fax: 221 33 864 26 64
Mob: 221 77 658 62 27
Email:
sadibou.marong@amnesty.org
Skype: sadiboumarone
Twitter : @Cheikhsadbu
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