Monday 11 January 2016

MOKOLO MARKET, POLICE STATION ATTACKS : SUSPECTS FREED

Almost half the number of ‘delinquents’ who attacked the Mokolo police station in Yaoundé, destroying and looting from shops have been granted bail. 

The majority are still languishing behind bars. “They are being questioned by the police and would have to be presented before an examining magistrate where they could be charged with destruction of property and looting,” said a security source handling the file.

Briqueterie Residents: Suing for Real 'peace'?
The Divisional Officer for Yaoundé II Subdivision, Yampen Ousman said the administration wanted the detained suspects to assist in identifying those responsible for the violence that gripped his area of jurisdiction on January 7. 

He spoke shortly after locals in the Briqueterie neighbourhood organized a ‘peace march’ on Saturday January 9 to distance themselves from acts that threatened the stability of the nation’s capital.

The more than 700 placard wielding residents marched to the D.O’s office, denouncing those they said, were making attempts at destabilizing the country. A good number of Muslims that populate the area took part in the 'peace march'.

Close to 50 shops in the Mokolo Market were vandalized and looted while scores of people sustained injuries when irate youths in the Briqueterie neighbourhood took to the streets in retaliation to the death of one of theirs killed by policemen who came to the rescue of a woman who had been assaulted.

Violence only subsided when police and gendarmes stepped in.



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