Cameroonians on the Worst of the Worst List pubished by the USA
The United States Department of Homeland Security, DHS, has listed 15 Cameroonian nationals among 355 West Africans targeted under its immigration enforcement and deportation crackdown.
The individuals appear on the DHS “Arrested: Worst of the Worst” portal, which highlights foreign nationals arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, ICE.
The list forms part of what has been described as the “WOW” initiative, also referred to in some reports as the West Africa Operations Watch, targeting nationals from several West African and Central African countries for removal from the United States.
The DHS portal, filtered by country of origin, lists 15 individuals identified as Cameroonian nationals.
They include persons arrested in several U.S. states, including Maryland, Pennsylvania, California, Texas, Virginia, Minnesota, Kansas and North Carolina.
The offences listed against them include money laundering, kidnapping of a minor, dangerous drugs, larceny, wire fraud, counterfeiting, sex assault, robbery, perjury, burglary, hit and run, and sexual exploitation of a minor via telecommunications.
Among the names appearing on the DHS page are Idriss Tchouala Nkujate, Clovis Neba, Malcolm De Pippa, Gallimard Kamtchouang, Desmond Fodje Bobga, Franklin Fotoh, Than Min, Bertrand Tento, Christopher Agha, Francis Tchouateu, Bradley Mua Mbague Pouka, Lea Mbassi Ngom-Priso, Ewallor Ngaaje, Julie Kwuiba Tchana Epse Yopa, and Valentine Moffor.
The broader DHS list reportedly covers 355 West African nationals. Nigeria accounts for the highest number, with 110 people listed, followed by Liberia with 94, Ghana with 30, and Senegal with 19.
The list also includes 15 Cameroonians, 14 Gambians, 14 Ivorians, 12 Mauritanians, 11 Cape Verdeans, nine Burkinabes, eight Nigeriens, six Guineans, six Togolese, five Malians, and one national each from Benin and Guinea-Bissau.
Although Cameroon is often classified as Central Africa, it appears on the DHS list alongside West African countries affected by the latest immigration enforcement action.
On the DHS page, the department says it is highlighting foreign nationals arrested by ICE as part of the U.S. government’s wider immigration enforcement drive.
The department also presents the operation as part of the administration’s efforts to carry out mass deportations, beginning with individuals it describes as serious criminal offenders.
However, from the information available on the DHS portal, it is important to note that the listing does not clearly state whether all 15 Cameroonians have already been deported, are awaiting deportation, or are still going through immigration or legal processes in the United States.
Several social media posts and graphics have described the development as the “deportation of 15 Cameroonians.” But the official information available so far confirms that the individuals have been listed by DHS and linked to ICE arrests under a deportation-focused enforcement operation.
It does not, from the available details, provide a confirmed date of removal or indicate that all the listed Cameroonians have already arrived in Cameroon.
For this reason, the more accurate wording is that the United States has listed 15 Cameroonians among foreign nationals targeted in an immigration enforcement and deportation crackdown.
The publication of names, photographs, offences, and arrest locations has also raised questions about public naming, due process, and the handling of deportation cases involving African nationals.
Immigration advocates have previously expressed concern about the treatment of deportees and the lack of clarity surrounding some U.S. removal operations involving African countries.
For Cameroon, the development is likely to attract public attention because it involves nationals accused of serious offences in the United States, at a time when immigration enforcement remains a major political issue in Washington.
It remains unclear whether Cameroonian authorities have received official communication from the U.S. government about the listed individuals or whether arrangements have been made for their return.
Families seeking information may also face uncertainty over whether their relatives are in ICE custody, awaiting removal, appealing their cases, or already removed from the United States.
For now, the DHS listing confirms that 15 Cameroonians are among the 355 African nationals named in the U.S. immigration enforcement operation, but further official clarification is needed on their current status and whether deportations have already taken place.
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