This episode is a stream update issues which is brought by the community. Will Ambazonia become Africa’s newest country? Voices of cameroon secessionist movement are getting louder and then they will meet s journalist who took a who took a personal journey into the practice of female genital mutilation. Why was Chad added to the recently amended White house travel ban?
The new social media campaign is urging the United States to reconsider. Here’s Abu Becker who pitched the story. Abu Becker said the country that fought against terrorism needs to honored, needs to be respected and needs to be worked closely with and that’s why when Chad was put on a travel ban by the USA, everyone was shocked and surprised. That’s why everyone started to use the hashtag Chad travel ban to ask why Chad has been banned?
It doesn’t make sense and there is no logic behind it. There are no data supporting it and the hashtag has been supported by so many people globally and it had reached so many organizations internationally. So the objectives of the hashtags were met because now people were aware of the fact that Australian people were against this ban. Not many people know why Chad was put on the new White house travel ban that was updated in late September. The country has been an ally to the United States in the African continent.US president Donald Trump’s executive said CHad does not adequately share public safety and terrorism related information and that several terrorist groups are active within Chad or in the surrounding region, including elements of Boko Haram, ISIS-West Africa, and al-Qa’ida in the Islamic Maghreb.” Chad’s government has issued a statement asking the White House to reconsider and activists like Abu Bakkar have mobilized online to put pressure on the US government to explain itself.Will “Ambazonia” become Africa’s newest country? Calls for secession are growing and an Anglophone separatist movement in the south-west and north-west of Cameroon is gaining momentum. Separatists say they have been marginalised by a Francophone government. Protests have been raging for a year now, shutting down schools and courts, and recent violence between security forces and opposition activists killed more than 17 people, according to Amnesty International.President Paul Biya has condemned the violence and both sides are called for talks. But no one knows what’s going to happen next.
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