Operation Bamenda Clean

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Date8 September 2020[2] present[3]
Location
Status Ongoing[4]
Operation Bamenda Clean
Part of the Anglophone Crisis

Cameroonian soldiers in front of a captured rebel hideout at Bamenda in 2021[1]
Date8 September 2020[2] present[3]
Location
Status Ongoing[4]
Belligerents
Cameroon Ambazonia
Commanders and leaders
Brig. Gen. Valere Nka[5]
Brig. Gen. Ekongwesse Divine Nnoko[1][6]
Gousmo Emile[5]
Paul Achobang (Mayor of Bamenda)[3]
"General Sweet Tuma" (POW)[7]
"General Lion" [1]
"General Cobra" (POW)[8]
"General Cross and Die" [9]
"General Trouble" [10]
"General Satan" [11]
"General Weapon" [12]
Units involved
Rapid Intervention Battalion
5th Joint Gendarmerie Region[6]
Police units[13]
Ambazonia Defence Forces[14]
Bambalang Marine Forces[15]
Other unspecified armed groups
Casualties and losses
Over 20 surrendered (according to Cameroon)[16]

Operation Bamenda Clean is an ongoing Cameroonian special counter-insurgency operation in Bamenda, Northwest Region, aimed at preventing armed Ambazonian separatists from operating in the city.[17] By January 2021, Cameroon was gradually achieving what a security analyst at the University of Yaoundé called "relative peace" in Bamenda,[4] and the mayor of the city stated that the operation was succeeding.[3] However, as of March 2021, separatist-imposed ghost towns remained widely respected by the local population,[18] and separatists controlled most roads leading in and out of Bamenda.[19]

View of Bamenda

Throughout the Anglophone Crisis, armed separatists had used motorcycles to carry out hit-and-run attacks against soldiers and police officers,[20] and the Cameroonian security forces wished to deprive them of bases of operation in the city and its vicinity.[21] On September 4, the Mayor of Bamenda outlawed motorcycles in the city, to which separatists responded by threatening to bring all traffic to a halt.[22] Three days prior to the official launch of the operations, soldiers from the Rapid Intervention Battalion had killed a prominent Ambazonian general in Bamenda named Luca Fonteh, known as the nom de guerre "General Mad Dog".[23]

The rebels in Bamenda include female fighters.[1]

The operation

Alleged abuses

References

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