Lilian Dibo Eyong
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Lilian Dibo Eyong is a Cameroonian wheelchair model, polio survivor, and activist.[1][2][3]
Lilian was born in Lobe Estate, as the last child in a polygamous family. She is the eleventh and youngest child from her father's side, and the seventh and youngest child from her mother's side.[2] At the age of two years and six months, following a bout of fever, she was found to have been affected by poliomyelitis.[4] Lilian grew up in Camp 9, where she attended early primary school. Her older siblings would take turns to carry her on their backs to and from school. Lilian completed her primary school in Bekora Barombi (Ndoro). She then pursued her secondary education in Kumba.
Lilian got pregnant when she was in Form 5 and returned to Bekora. Her son Nathanael was born by C-section. She returned to Kumba to take her Ordinary Levels, followed by her Advanced Levels. She graduated from the University of Buea to pursue a degree in accounting. Lilian was the only wheelchair user during her stay there and faced infrastructural, communication, and attitudinal barriers, among others.[4]
When Lilian was in her second year at university, the Anglophone Crisis broke out.[5] It coincided with the students' strike for presidential grants, which was supposed to have been awarded to students with GPAs of over 2. However, the students were driven away with tear gas by the military. Because of the all the rioting, Lilian had to leave Buea and move to Bekora. When the fighting intensified, she and her family left for Lipenja for safety.
Lilian then enrolled at the Gospel Outreach Counseling Training Institute in Kumba, where she obtained a Diploma in Trauma Counseling and was awarded the Best Outstanding Student.
In 2019, Lilian wrote a book called Living with Disability and began hosting a radio program to educate the public based on her personal experience as a person with disability.[6][3]