Tensions and violence are rising in eastern Cameroon as Chinese firms take advantage of a regulatory twilight zone to mine gold, amid killings, land grabs, corruption.
“There are constant conflicts between Cameroonians and the Chinese” over gold mining, said Narma Ndoyama, a farmer in Longa Mali, a small village in the middle of the mining area.
At the beginning of April, four companies were banned from mining in East Cameroon, according to Foder, a group that campaigns for protecting the environment and rural development.
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One of them was the Chinese firm Lu and Lang, which is notorious in the region after one of its employees allegedly killed a Cameroonian who was looking for gold on land claimed by the company, according to Foder.
In this photograph taken on April 4, employees of a Chinese mining company operates machinery at a mining site in the Cameroon town of Longa Mali. Photo: Agence France-Presse
It is easy to vent anger against the Chinese, but who brought them in? It is Cameroonians that have led them to behave like they do
Gabriel Yadji, Cameroon mining ministry official
“Villagers rioted and killed the Chinese man” by stoning him, said Ndoyama.