Cameroon sets presidential election date for October 12
Cameroon President Paul Biya attends the Paris Peace Forum, France, November 12, 2019. REUTERS/Charles Platiau/File Photo
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Cameroon will vote in a presidential election on
October 12, according to a decree issued by President Paul Biya on Friday.
Biya -- the de facto candidate of the Cameroon People's
Democratic Movement (CPDM), of which he is party leader–– has neither confirmed
nor denied whether he intends to run for an eighth term.
Several longstanding supporters of Biya appear to be
distancing themselves from the 92-year-old head of state, who has ruled the
west African country with an iron fist for nearly 43 years.
But the opposition is deeply divided and is struggling to
unite behind a single candidate.
There have been two high-profile defections from Biya's camp
in recent weeks.
Employment Minister Issa Tchiroma Bakary resigned from
government in June to stand in the election for his Front for the National
Salvation of Cameroon (FSNC).
Former prime minister Bello Bouba Maigari, an ally of Biya's
for nearly 30 years, said he was standing for National Union for Democracy and
Progress (NUDP)
Both Tchiroma's and Maigari's parties were longstanding
allies of Biya's CPDM, which has held power since independence in 1960.
Also in the running are Maurice Kamto, who came second in
the 2018 presidential election and is Biya’s fiercest critic, and prominent
opposition figure Cabral Libii of the Cameroonian Party for National
Reconciliation (CPNR).
Candidates have until July 21 to declare that they intend to
run for office.


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