Cameroon’s
military has begun cracking down on Nigerian businesses suspected of evading
taxes, according to VOA. Cameroon gained total control of West Africa’s Bakassi
pensinsula in August 2013, following a prescribed five-year transition from
Nigeria. But most of the oil-rich area’s 300,000 inhabitants still are
Nigerians.
VOA
reports business owners don’t understand Cameroon's tax laws, said Stanley Obi,
a provision store owner, adding that he’s seen an array of people seeking
payments.
"At
times, you see the council will come to collect theirs after the tax [taxation
officers] will come, police will come," Obi said. "You see, you are
just confused in the whole system."
Fresh
fish retailer Na Eric said that ever since Cameroon gained sovereignty over the
peninsula, Nigerians in Bakassi frequently have been harassed by Cameroon
soldiers: "It is a means of killing our businesses."
Curfew
introduced
Obi
also said a curfew was imposed in the peninsula last week following disputes
between businessmen and groups of tax collectors.
The
governor of the southwest region in which Bokassi is located confirmed his
administration had imposed a nightly curfew. Bernard Okalia Bilai said the
decision to halt people coming from Nigeria’s Cross River state followed a
meeting at which peninsula residents complained that others were disrespecting
maritime borders, attacking the locals and refusing to pay taxes.
The
governor said Nigerians must understand that Bakassi is now a Cameroonian
territory and that whoever lives there must submit to all national rules and
regulations, including paying taxes.
The
International Court of Justice had awarded control of the disputed Bakassi
Peninsula to Cameroon in a 2002 ruling. Nigeria eventually decided not to fight
the ruling, over the protests of many Bakassi residents.
Cameroon
requirements
In
2008, the ICJ gave Nigeria five years to transition and cede control. As of
August 14, 2013, Nigerians – who constitute 90 percent of the peninsula's
population – had to obtain residence permits and be treated as foreign
nationals. Those who decided to become Cameroonians had to acquire national
identity cards and respect Cameroon laws
Mayor
Aboko Patrick of Kombo Abedimo, a locality in Bakassi, said its residents must
pay taxes, as determined in various treaties approved by Cameroon and Nigeria.
'No
indiscriminate collection of taxes'
In
the United Nations-backed Greentree Agreement that in 2006 set terms of the
handover, "one of the articles states that there shall be no
indiscriminate collection of taxes within the Bakassi peninsula. It did not say
that there shall be no collection of taxes," Patrick said. "But the Nigerians,
who outnumber Cameroonians, have [understood] that there will be no collection
of taxes."
Immediately
after the ICJ ruling, tax collection in Bakassi was suspended. But as of
mid-August 2013, residents had to start paying their share.
Bilai,
the governor, accused Nigerians of disrespecting the ICJ ruling’s terms by
refusing to pay taxes.
Cameroon
created a special committee to help develop the area. Its head, Ndoh Beltha
Bakata, said it’s difficult to help Nigerians feel at home in Cameroon.
"Their culture is not our culture and so
they have to be sensitized," Bakata said. "We are just trying to make
them see first of all that Bakassi is Cameroon, but we don't force them to do
anything against their will. Now we have to implement our own laws."
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