Bamenda: Heavy rains allegedly kill 8-year-old child.

By Ndi Fungwe


Following the torrential rains of Sunday, July 23, 2023, in Bamenda, the regional capital of Cameroon’s North West region, a fourth-grade student at Providence Kindergarten Primary School, Ndamukong, drowned after being swept away by swift water.

Ndobgkengful Cheris was inside a neighbor’s home during the torrential downpour that lasted nearly an hour on a Sunday.

She is alleged to have vanished without anyone in the neighbor’s home being aware. The parents did not realize she was missing until they returned from their Sunday meeting and began searching for her.

“On our return from the Sunday meeting, we realized that she was not at home. Because every time we return from a meeting, she is the first to greet us, but she was absent on that Sunday,” explained Cheris’ parents.

“We called for her without getting any response. Then, we initiated a search after being informed that she was in the neighbour’s home, but then later disappeared in an unknown direction. We spent the entire Sunday evening searching for her” they continued.

Cherish’s father, Ndongkeng Celestine, explained that a group of young men who typically remove sand from a nearby stream discovered her body in the stream early on Monday morning.

Cheris’ girl’s body was removed from the water and buried behind the family compound in Bamenda, after it was discovered on Monday, July 24, 2023.

Mr. Ndongkeng, however, explained that they were a bit uncertain as to the real cause of death as there were no signs of drowning after an examination of her daughter’s corpse.

“We did not discover any water in her stomach, nothing indicated she drowned. So I am so confused. We had to bury her here and tomorrow I will take the ground back to the village to inform family members. Because of our custom, we couldn’t take the corpse home,” he explained.

Her family is from Bamouck Village in the Libialem division of Cameroon’s South West region but as Mr. Ndongkeng explained, they could not take the corpse back to the village because tradition forbidds them from doing so.

“When someone dies in such a circumstance, they are interred by the water, but there was no space to bury her where she was discovered, so I brought her home and buried her behind my house,” Mr. Ndongkeng stated.

Mimi Mefo Info (MMI)

Recent Posts

Fear Grips Mbororo Community as Kidnappings for Ransom Increase Along Bambui-Babanki Road.

Residents and travelers have raised concerns over what they describe as a growing pattern of…

3 hours ago

Marie Flore Mboussi fait entendre sa voix jusqu’en Amérique latine.

Le nom de Marie Flore Mboussi apparaît désormais parmi les auteurs de Conciencia Democrática, une…

5 hours ago

Douala : le peuple sawa descend dans la rue contre la création d’une chefferie allogène à bonateki-deido

Douala vit ce vendredi 5 juin une journée de tension dans le quartier historique de…

6 hours ago

US Lists 15 Cameroonians Among 355 West Africans Targeted in Deportation Crackdown

The United States Department of Homeland Security, DHS, has listed 15 Cameroonian nationals among 355…

1 day ago

Arrests Over TikTok Threats Raise Questions About Selective Enforcement of Cameroon’s Cybercrime Law

The arrest of three teenagers in Yaoundé over alleged threats made on TikTok has reopened…

2 days ago

Prof. Bell Bitjoka: The Cybercrime Expert Behind Key Digital Evidence in the Martinez Zogo Case

By Njoh Linda Prof. Bell Bitjoka, a Cameroonian cybercrime specialist and digital forensics expert, has…

3 days ago