Prominent Cameroonian human rights activist, Dr Beatrice Titanji, leapt for joy when a major secessionist group declared a ceasefire on March 29, to protect people from the “fury” of Coronavirus in the central African state’s English-speaking heartlands, but her hopes have since been dashed as fighting continues to rage.
“It’s a scary situation. Thousands are trapped in the bushes,” Dr Titanji told the BBC.
“How do we tell them about COVID-19?” she added.
The Southern Cameroons Defence Forces (SCDF) unilaterally declared the ceasefire, following an appeal by United Nations (UN) chief António Guterres for conflict to end across the world.
“The fury of the virus illustrates the folly of war,” he said.
“It is time to put armed conflict on lockdown and focus together on the true fight of our lives,” Mr Guterres added.
However, none of Cameroon’s other secessionist groups, estimated to number at least 15, have heeded the appeal.
The Ambazonia Governing Council, which is one of the biggest groups, said a unilateral ceasefire would open the way for government troops to march unopposed into territory under its control.
Cameroon’s government, led by the French-speaking President Paul Biya, has not declared a truce either and, to the dismay of aid workers, has banned humanitarian flights, along with commercial flights, in its efforts to curb the spread of the virus.
“If we don’t have the means to reach out to people and give them food and medication, many of them are going to suffer. They will die of hunger and illnesses,” said Dr Titanji, an academic who leads the Women’s Guild for Empowerment and Development, a non-governmental organisation involved in peace initiatives in Cameroon.
Both English and French are official languages in Cameroon following a complicated colonial history but in practice, the Francophone majority dominates, leading the Anglophone minority to complain of discrimination.
About 3,000 people have already died since protests over the increasing use of French in courts and schools in the English-speaking heartlands of the North-West and South-West regions morphed into violence in 2017.
Nearly a million people have also been displaced by the conflict – many of them fled into bushes, where they built huts and villages as they started life afresh after their once-peaceful cities and towns turned into battle zones.