Benakuma: Sad tale of a forgotten people

Benakuma is now top on the list of forgotten areas as conflict digs deep into the nerves of Cameroon’s North West and South West Regions.

Very little about the people’s story, ordeals, hardship and misery is known to the world.

Benakuma is the headquarters of Menchum Valley Subdivision, Menchum Division of the North West Region of Cameroon.

Locals now live in huts, constructed in bushes as they escape violence in the wake of constant shootouts between pro-independence fighters and the military.

One of the scores of huts constructed in bushes. The safety of the people is not guaranteed as they are exposed to rains, snakes…

“More than half of the villagers who have not escaped to neighbouring cities and villages for safety are in the bush,” a resident told Mimi Mefo info.

The military arrived the village on October 15, 2018, and have been camping around the council premises closer to the Benakuma market since then.

“The normal market place is located some one kilometer from the three-corners.

Villagers now meet here to buy and sell goods


At the market here, customers are few, due to economic hardship as the crisis deepens

The Benakuma Council office is beside the permanent market place and has been occupied by the military since they arrived. The people are afraid to use the market. They now display their goods about one kilometre away, our source narrated.

But the market did not go operational until few weeks go. For the first time in one year, the market went operational.

The village is now made of old people as young boys and girls are either in bushes or in safer regions

The people of Benakuma have lost count of civilian deaths, and have skeletons of burnt houses everywhere.
But they know how it all began:
“Since the military stormed the village on October 2018, a lot has happened.
First they burnt about 40 houses that week and killed five civilians and three amba boys. Now, we cannot tell the number of casualties on the side of the military.

Benakuma

This caused the population to flee into the bushes. They have been living in the bushes for the past nine months,” a source who opted for anonymity revealed.

Back to school is in less than one month with intensified campaigns being trumpeted by rights groups, civil society organizations and other stakeholders.

What is the future for Benakuma kids?
Children in this conflic-hit area have not been to school for two years.

“Recently, the military has been organising meetings with the population, inviting them to come out of the bushes and stay in their houses,”

But is the village safe enough for the people who are caught between two smoking barrels?

The bush is now home to many

Mimi Mefo Info

Contact us for remarks and news: +237679135573

You may support us on paypal: millyville2004@yahoo.fr

Mimi Mefo Info (MMI)

Recent Posts

Cameroonian Nurse Researcher Calls for Unified Health Council for Nurses, Midwives and Health Technicians

A U.S.-based Cameroonian nurse educator, researcher and healthcare policy advocate, John Nyah Mbout, has called…

17 hours ago

Cameroonians in Derby Mark World Refugee Day with Culture, Courage and a Message of Belonging

Cameroonians in Derby have taken part in World Refugee Day commemorations for the first time,…

18 hours ago

“I Am In Cameroon”: Bamenda Teacher Cries Out After Being Listed As Living Abroad

Teacher Cries Foul After Being Listed Among Staff Allegedly Living Abroad A government secondary school…

5 days ago

Eight-Year-Old Rape Survivor’s Story Exposes Urgent Need for Stronger Child Protection in Tiko Communities

A community sensitisation campaign against rape in Tiko has brought renewed attention to the hidden…

6 days ago

Tribunal militaire de Bafoussam : 46 détenus de Mbouda sans avocat, leur affaire renvoyée au 15 juillet 2026

Ils sont 46. Quarante-six Camerounais, arrêtés à Mbouda en octobre 2025 dans le contexte tendu…

7 days ago