Amba Forces Execute Suspected Traitor in Market Square
-An Eyewitness Report by Franklin Sone Bayen
Flasko was smiling when his abductors with guns rode with
him back to the village, but few minutes later they shot him dead in front of a
multitude of villagers on Market Day.
In the
morning of Wednesday, March 14, the Secretary of the Traditional Council of
Ayong, a village of the Upper Balong clan in Nguti subdivision, was shot dead
in cold blood at his home, in front of a multitude of villagers and people from
elsewhere who had converged there for the weekly Market Day.
Mr Akum
Zaccheus Nangwe, popularly called Flasko, said to be in his 60s, had been taken
away only minutes after dawn by unidentified men, believed to be Ambazonia
fighters, some of them with dane guns, who came on five motorbikes and
surrounded his house. They took him away
on one of the bikes. His bewildered wife fled to Manyemen, minutes’ drive away,
to report what she called the “kidnap” of her husband, to friends and family
members and to seek help from who could offer to secure his release.
Thirty
minutes to one hour later, two gunmen returned with Flasko on a bike; one
riding, the other sitting behind Flasko who was thus sitting between them. Few
minutes later, Flasko was shot dead.
Besides
his functions as secretary of the Traditional Council, Flasko was also the
local Civil Registry Officer. It is not clear why he was targeted but some
accounts say the gunmen accused him of being a “blackleg” who identifies and
reports local people to government security and defence forces as collaborators
of Ambazonia fighters. Some say he had been accused some three months ago of
betraying local bush meat dealers who use the Ayong road which is a branch off
between Talangaye and Ebanga villages. Witnesses say the seizure of bush meat
which means huge losses for local boys, intensified with the present armed
skirmishes.
People
said to be familiar with the modus operandi of the Ambazonia fighters say when
they take their suspects away, they put them through a trial which is a
combination of interrogations and mystical verifications to establish their
standing with ADF fighters. Those who have witnessed travelling past their road
blocks say they wave a machete in front of the suspect and if he is an enemy to
their cause, the machete would turn red or get smeared with blood. They believe
that is what Flasko was put through that Wednesday morning before he was
brought back to the village. His mortal remains were laid to rest on Thursday,
March 22.
Below is
the testimony of someone (his identity withheld for obvious reasons) who
witnessed the execution of Flasko:
I
witnessed the execution of Flasko with my own two naked eyes. That Wednesday
was the Ayong Market Day. Word was on every lip that Flasko had been taken away
by some men with guns who came on motorbikes at about 6.30am.
Incidentally,
all the foodstuff I bought that day, I kept them on Flasko’s veranda which is
besides the market. Before I could collect my things to leave, we saw two gunmen
on one bike riding back with Flasko. There was great relief at the market.
Flasko, sitting between the two men carrying dane guns hanging across their
shoulders, was even smiling which to us implied an acquittal from the “trial’.
People gathered from the market in joy.
The man
behind who looked like the man in charge, asked Flasko to go into his
house. Shortly after Flasko went in, the
man in charge walked casually to the corner of Flasko’s house. Then he stopped
suddenly in his tracks and stepped backwards as if he had seen something
dangerous. From the front of Flasko’s house, he called out, “Pa come so, come
so.”
When
Flasko stepped out, the man motioned him to come to the corner of his house. We
were watching. The man pointed at something on the ground, indicating something
to Flasko near his room window. We couldn’t see what he was pointing at, but
the man then said to Flasko, “Pa just di go so straight and no try for do
anything funny.”
At that
juncture, the man gave his gun to the other man who was the rider (though he
too had a gun) and said to him, “Waste he, waste he.” The other man pointed the
gun at Flasko from behind and fired the fatal shot that brought Flasko down and
left him dead. At the time the shot went out, Flasko was turning his head to
look behind.
I was
left confused, with unanswered questions. From hope that all was well because
Flasko was smiling when they brought him back, to the sudden order to shoot him
dead, I have been wondering what would have happened. What did the gunman see
on the ground outside Flasko’s window? Had Flasko flung something out through
the window? What was it? By the way, the man didn’t pick up anything from where
he was pointing and nothing was found there. Was it something mystical that
naked eyes could not see?
When
Flasko dropped dead, pandemonium broke loose! Within a couple of minutes, the
Ayong market had emptied. Flasko’s body was first taken to the Manyemen
hospital and later to the Kumba General Hospital mortuary.
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