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ConflictsCameroon

Cameroon's 'ghost town' days: How residents cope in lockdown

Jean Marie Ngong Song in Bamenda | Isaac Kaledzi in Accra
October 23, 2023

For years, separatists in Cameroon's English-speaking regions have enforced a general strike to protest the government. Residents in lockdown are creatively socializing, but the lagging economy is deepening poverty.

A city dotted with trees
Bamenda in Cameroon turns into a ghost town on MondaysImage: Reinhard Marscha/imageBROKER/picture alliance

It's 10 a.m. on a Monday in the Mile 2 Nkwen locality of Bamenda, a city in northwestern Cameroon. The streets are empty.

Mondays are "ghost town" days in the English-speaking regions of Cameroon that became engulfed in a separatist crisis some seven years ago. 

In many communities, everyone is expected to stay home. Markets are closed, offices locked, and the streets deserted.

The separatists who took up arms against the government in Yaounde enforce the Monday lockdowns. Residents risk being attacked, kidnapped or shot if they disobey.

The separatists hope to mount pressure on the central government to make concessions for the Anglophone community in the country by stopping all economic activity once a week.

Cameroon has been plagued by fighting since English-speaking separatists launched a rebellion against the government in 2017. The dissidents say they want the region to secede from the area dominated by the French-speaking majority and aim to create an independent, English-speaking state.

As a way out of the isolation and boredom of "ghost towns," residents are finding new ways to network and support each other.

There are social and sports clubs, credit and thrift schemes, choirs or salons to stay active. 

Economic social network gatherings

In Bamenda, one economic network benefits all members. Financial contributions  are saved, pooled and paid out on a rotational basis to individual members.

The "Prosperous Neighbors" social network president, Ambechi Louis, says that despite the difficult security situation, members are finding ways to remain hopeful.

"We use Mondays for our meeting days because we used to hold them on Sundays, and people often had other commitments. Since Mondays are a free day in the region, more people can participate," Louis tells DW.

The streets are mostly empty on Mondays in BamendaImage: Jean Marie Ngong Song/DW

Carine belongs to a social network group for women only. Mondays are her chance to get to know her neighbors better since everyone is busy throughout the rest of the week, she says.

"We are into neighbor solidarity and many others like veteran sporting clubs. Monday is a day to be home, so we want to use that to exercise, participate in online groups, wash clothes, meet friends and socialize," Carine tells DW.

Thriving drinking spots

Pubs in several communities are cashing in on the "ghost town" days. On Mondays, some pubs even apply a members-only policy and decline to serve drinks to anyone outside of their communities.

One pub owner, known as "Spice Boy," says strangers aren't allowed entry for security reasons. Any resident of the community will, however, be served.

"The days that the sales are [good] are Mondays," he tells DW. "The reason is simple: We have meetings that have all been moved from Sundays to Mondays, and after these meetings, [people] come to drink and socialize."

"Spice Boy" says a normal day can bring in about €50-70 ($53-73), but a "ghost town" day can net double. 

"Mondays can be very boring, and to end the boredom, people come to drink," he said.

Cameroon's abandoned schools

03:05

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A local economy 'on its knees'

But some analysts are worried about the prevailing situation of the "ghost towns" and the implications for the economic activities in the region.

"You see, 'ghost towns' are very bad for the economy. Bamenda, for example, has lost its place as the fastest growing city in the sub-region," Stephen Nsum, an economist and a Bamenda-based university lecturer, told DW.

He believes that if the phenomenon isn't eliminated, it could plunge more people into poverty.

"Thousands have been laid off from their jobs because salaries can't be paid. Investors have pulled out of the two Anglophone regions, and even the biggest state employer after the public service is on its knees," Nsum said.

"If ghost towns are ended, there is hope the region shall gradually return to its part to economic recovery," he added.

The English-speaking regions of Cameroon remain conflict zones, with lives lost, properties destroyed, and the humanitarian crisis worsening.

Edited by: Louisa Schaefer and Benita van Eyssen

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