Basile Atangana Kouna was removed from his ministerial position during President Paul Biya’s March 2 cabinet reshuffle. He had already been ordered the previous month not to leave the country.
“Atangana Kouna is in Cameroon. He was arrested in Nigeria and sent back to Cameroon. He arrived this evening,” one police source, who asked not to be named as he was not authorized to speak to the press, told Reuters.
104 abducted Nigerian schoolgirls freed by Boko Haram
Vision 4, a private television channel considered allied to Biya, reported that the former minister arrived at the international airport in the capital Yaounde at 6:20 pm escorted by police officers.
Another channel, Canal 2 International, also reported his arrest in Nigeria and subsequent extradition back to Cameroon.
Cameroon’s government spokesman was not immediately reachable for comment. Neither were officials in neighbouring Nigeria.
It was not clear what charges Atangana Kouna was facing, but there was speculation on Thursday that he was arrested as part of an anti-corruption drive known as Operation Sparrowhawk.
Four Cameroon soldiers killed in restive anglophone region
Three men — a former Ministry of Public Works official, the head of a state company, and the ex-rector of the University of Douala —were arrested as part of the operation earlier this week.
Cameroon’s oil wealth has spawned a sprawling political patronage system fuelled by revenues from crude exports. Transparency International ranked it 153 out of 180 countries on its annual corruption perceptions index.
Biya has ruled virtually by decree since taking over from a retiring predecessor in 1982 and then winning an election with 99.98 per cent of the vote a year later.
Now 85, Biya is expected to again seek re-election in presidential polls later this year, but he is currently facing some of the biggest challenges to his 35-year rule.
Cameroon’s oil-dependent economy has been crippled by low crude prices. And separatists are mounting a guerrilla campaign in the country’s two English-speaking provinces, demanding independence from the majority Francophone Central African nation.
COMMENTS
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ