Armed police in Bamenda which is the capital of northwest Cameroon dragged students across the streets and forced them to roll in sewage due to protests. The English-speaking region of Cameroon has been affected by protests by students and teachers over what they termed forceful take over by the government to replace them with French education system.
English and French are the two official languages in the country but it was lately reported that the government which has been accuse of favouring French-speaking region was taking them to replace teaching in English-speaking schools with French teachers. Share on Facebook Share on Twitter In an interview with IBT, Tassang Wilfred who is the secretary-general of Cameroon Teachers’ Trade Union said: “The French system of education is the majority and has been trying to wipe out our system of education, and that means wiping out our own cultural heritage.
“We have been trying to resist that, but we have got to the point where they [government] are infiltrating Francophone teachers who cannot speak English and don’t even master our own system of education and sometimes they teach in a language that’s neither English nor French.
We call it Franglais or Pidgin,” he went on alleging. “Anglophone teachers want to teach in English and we want Anglophone children to be taught by teachers who know the English sub-education system of Cameroon.” Share on Facebook Share on Twitter In a video shared by Sahara Reporters, it allegedly shows the armed police in the region [pushing protesting students into sewages and forcing them to roll in it. See the video below:
Read more: https://www.naij.com/1068927-see-police-horribly-punished-bamenda-students-protesting-photosvideo.html
Read more: https://www.naij.com/1068927-see-police-horribly-punished-bamenda-students-protesting-photosvideo.html



