Head of State s personal representative Paul Atanga Nji implores the clergy to the ministry of hope in challenging moments in the North West and South West regions.
Archbishop Andrew Nkea has described the Anglophone Crisis of Cameroon as a crisis of culture and belonging, debunking the misinformation around it as a language crisis between the French and English-speaking regions of Cameroon.
Men dressed in military fatigues stormed the junction on July 16 and killed 10 civilians, just two days after five teenagers were killed in the same neighborhood of Bamenda by people suspected to be the Cameroon military.
“I must emphasize that the small Christian community is a backbone of the church in Africa. In Europe because of individualism like the Holy Father said, it could be difficult but here we have the structures and it is something that is woven into our culture. And so, the small Christian communities, the mission stations, the parishes, the deaneries, and the dioceses are all structures through which consultations can be done. And I think that when you get the small Christian communities walking the church is vibrant because everybody knows everybody in the neighbourhood,” says Most Rev Andrew Nkea of the Catholic Diocese of Bamenda, Cameroon.