Categories: Live UpdatePolitics

Mamadou Mota Asks Government To End Crackdown On CRM Militants

The National Vice President for the Cameroon Renaissance Movement, CRM, has cried out to the regime to end its crackdown on CRM militants and to release unconditionally one of theirs arrested on October 17, 2021.

Abama Vladimir, a politician of the Cameroon Renaissance Movement was arrested on October 17 by the police in his home as he convened a party meeting.

“A CRM militant is in a cell for executing his constitutional rights… His arrest was nothing but a show of strength from the police and that the CRM Party should not exist,” Mamadou Mota claimed in a social media post.

The CRM vice president condemned the attack, and has asked that Abama Vladimir be released unconditionally by the police, as to him, he had done nothing wrong and was illegally arrested.

“The police who arrested him in his house did not even have a search warrant. They also took away his laptop as well as some house utensils that belonged to our comrade, ” Revealed Barrister Desiré Sikati of the CRM Party.

Mimi Mefo Info (MMI)

Recent Posts

Shot in the Face at 15, Bah Median Still Dreams of Becoming a Doctor

When Median Bah Ekue heard villagers saying she was dead, she could not speak to…

3 days ago

Women Left “in Constant Peril” as Biya Government Breaks Decade-Old Pledge on Violence—Report

A new Human Rights Watch report finds that fifteen years after promising to halve gender-based…

3 days ago

The Resignation That Rewrote a Legacy: One Year On From Issa Tchiroma’s Break With Biya

Today, 25 June, marks exactly one year since Issa Tchiroma Bakary did something Cameroonian politics…

3 days ago

Paul Biya Death Rumours: The Cameroon President Who Keeps “Dying” and Living

Paul Biya has been pronounced dead more times than most leaders are pronounced anything. The…

3 days ago

Mayo-Tsanaga: The Alarm Cry of a Division Battered by Insecurity

Mayo-Tsanaga continues to bear the scars of a security crisis that has dragged on for…

3 days ago