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Strategising to fail
Written by The Standard Tribune   
Wednesday, 27 January 2010 11:14

The elimination of Cameroon from Africa Cup of Nations on Monday was more than a lesson in football – the lack of strategy and foresight always leads to dismal performance. Cameroon went into the game without any real idea about how they hoped to perform well. Coach Paul Le Guen opted for a four-day training session. For a team full of so many new and young players, hoping to put on a good show with that kind of preparation was being overly ambitious. The results have been catastrophic. Cameroon scraped through the group stages in which they suffered at the hands of small Gabon and expectedly lost 3-1 to Egypt. The play style was hollow and the Lions were at the origin of nearly all goals against them. The old and new alike failed.

Next year, Cameroon will hold a presidential election. We fear that we are also going into that election, with no real idea about how to make it credible and acceptable to all parties. It is only now that ELECAM is really taking over the electoral process from ENAM. A full year has been spent getting the organ off the ground. By the close of this year, electoral registration is expected to begin. It is going to be a tough process. The roll is in such bad shape that it would make sense for ELECAM to simply keep aside and start off on a clean slate. But at the moment, there appears to be no real urgency to get Cameroonians out and interested in national politics. The current lack of trust in ELECAM, correctly or falsely, makes confidence-building, the most important task ahead of ELECAM – even before registration.
 
Fighting corruption with half measures
Written by The Standard Tribune   
Wednesday, 27 January 2010 11:10

The anti-corruption drive started in 2006 was a major turning point in Yaounde’s attitude towards the problem. It came after decades of blatant denial of its existence by the regime in Yaounde. Understandably, President Paul Biya was applauded at home and abroad. The United States pledged its full support to the campaign, as did many other Western powers and multilateral institutions. And then, suddenly, the operation dubbed sparrow-hawk began looking ugly. Critics said it had been diverted to fight political opposition and ethic groups complained of discrimination in the arrests.  Others wandered of what point the operation was, if it ended with the jailing of those found guilty, leaving stolen money stashed away. No doubt, by the time fresh arrests were made last week, some of the initial applause had considerably given way to suspicion.
The arrest of two former ministers brought the number of high profile arrests to more than 20. Security sources have told the Standard Tribune that in all around 500 people have been arrested. The number is impressive, even given the scale of corruption in the country. It shows for the first time that even if political scores are being settled, people with no known political might are being taken in. Added to the number of police officers being reprimanded every now and then for “harassment and extortion”, it is our belief that authorities are moving in the right direction. At some point, it would dawn on the public that things are changing.

Biya must take credit for those steps. But we fear that the lack of broad reforms could make any real results elusive. You cannot fight corruption by simply catching people and jailing them. It has not worked with other forms of crimes. Unless measures that make it difficult to be corrupt or steal from the public purse are put in place, people will still take a chance at bribery and embezzlement. Critical to this is to introduce more transparency in the way public affairs are conducted. Government procedures need to be simplified and made known to the wide public. Corruption in the taxation, customs and judicial sectors are largely provoked by red tape and opaque procedures.  Simple things like making large payments by bank transfer and cheques can limit the amount of cash in circulation and leave traces about where government money is going to.
 
Country on edge
Written by Eugene N. Nforngwa   
Monday, 28 December 2009 20:24

It looks like the build up to February 2008. State workers and private citizens are again voicing their frustration over the inability of the government to rescue them from difficult situations.

 
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