Bleur Brief

Bleur Brief Independence journalism from Limbe, SW, Cameroon. Facts, accountability and stories that matter.

Here's your daily update on what's happening around the world.
02/07/2026

Here's your daily update on what's happening around the world.

Here's your daily update on what's happening around the world.
02/07/2026

Here's your daily update on what's happening around the world.

What do you think about the latest developments? Share your views in the comments.
01/07/2026

What do you think about the latest developments? Share your views in the comments.

At Least 13 Dead as Floods Swamp Ghana's Capital ACCRA, Ghana (July 1) — At least 13 people have died after torrential r...
01/07/2026

At Least 13 Dead as Floods Swamp Ghana's Capital

ACCRA, Ghana (July 1) — At least 13 people have died after torrential rains triggered widespread flooding across Ghana's capital, Accra, submerging homes, cutting off major roads and forcing emergency services into a massive rescue operation, authorities said.

The Ghana National Fire Service said more than 470 people had been rescued from floodwaters as of Tuesday, warning that the death toll could rise as search and recovery efforts continue.

Hours of heavy rainfall on Sunday night left several low-lying communities underwater, trapping residents in their homes and stranding motorists. Images and videos shared on social media showed people wading through waist-deep water while abandoned vehicles were nearly submerged.

Emergency personnel from the police, military, fire service and the National Disaster Management Organisation have been deployed across the city to rescue victims and secure affected communities.

The flooding also triggered a fire at a rubber factory, creating a second emergency as firefighters battled both rising floodwaters and flames.

President said preliminary figures showed Accra received about 140 millimetres (5.5 inches) of rainfall—far exceeding the city's highest single-day rainfall of roughly 56 millimetres (2.2 inches) recorded last year.

"The scale of the rainfall underscores the growing impact of climate change," the president said after touring affected areas.

Authorities have advised residents in safe locations to remain indoors, while those living in flood-prone communities have been urged to relocate to higher ground. Officials also warned motorists and pedestrians to avoid crossing flooded roads because of strong currents and hidden dangers.

The has forecast more rainfall across southern Ghana, raising concerns that flooding could worsen in the coming days.

Floodwaters also reached electricity infrastructure, prompting temporary power outages in some communities as utility officials worked to prevent damage to equipment and reduce the risk of electrocution.

Accra experiences flooding almost every rainy season, with experts attributing the recurring problem to poor drainage systems, blocked gutters, rapid urban expansion and illegal construction on waterways.

Following an inspection of the affected areas, President Mahama ordered the demolition of illegal structures obstructing drainage channels, saying stronger enforcement would be needed to reduce future flood risks.

The disaster has revived memories of the devastating 2015 Accra floods, when heavy rains triggered an explosion at a fuel station that killed about 150 people, marking one of Ghana's deadliest disasters in recent history.

Rescue operations remain underway as authorities assess the full extent of the damage and search for people who may still be trapped by the floodwaters.This version follows a Reuters-style structure: a strong lead, concise paragraphs, verified facts, minimal adjectives, and clear attribution throughout.

US Supreme Court Blocks Trump's Bid to End Birthright Citizenship The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down President Donal...
30/06/2026

US Supreme Court Blocks Trump's Bid to End Birthright Citizenship

The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down President Donald Trump's executive order seeking to end automatic birthright citizenship, reaffirming that children born on American soil are U.S. citizens regardless of their parents' immigration status.

In a 6-3 ruling delivered on Tuesday, June 30, the court held that the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees citizenship to nearly everyone born in the United States, rejecting Trump's attempt to deny citizenship to children of undocumented immigrants and those in the country on temporary visas.

Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts said children born in the United States to parents who are unlawfully or temporarily present are "subject to the jurisdiction" of the country and are therefore citizens at birth under the Constitution.

Trump signed the executive order on January 20, 2025, his first day back in office, arguing that it would help curb illegal immigration and prevent so-called "birth tourism," where foreign nationals travel to the U.S. to give birth and secure citizenship for their children. However, the order was blocked by lower courts before it could take effect.

The Supreme Court's decision preserves a constitutional principle that has stood for more than 150 years under the Fourteenth Amendment, which states that "all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States."

The ruling marks a significant legal setback for Trump's immigration agenda and ensures that birthright citizenship remains intact across the United States.

'I Sold My Body So My Children Could Have a Better Life,' Elderly Cameroonian Woman SaysAn elderly Cameroonian woman ide...
30/06/2026

'I Sold My Body So My Children Could Have a Better Life,' Elderly Cameroonian Woman Says

An elderly Cameroonian woman identified as Ma Madeleine has sparked widespread reactions on social media after revealing that she worked as a s*x worker during the administration of former President of Cameroon, Amadou Ahidjo to provide for her children.

Speaking in a video shared on TikTok, Ma Madeleine recounted the difficult choices she made as a young mother, saying she entered s*x work out of desperation and with the hope of giving her children opportunities she never had.

According to her, every sacrifice she made was aimed at ensuring her children received a better upbringing and would never have to endure the hardships she faced.

«"I was a pr******te and I started during the days of President Ahmadou Ahidjo. I did it because I wanted my children to have a better life.»

«Today, I can never support or allow any of my children to do the same work. Any parent who knowingly allows their child to become a pr******te is simply benefiting from what that child is doing.»

«I went to the streets for the sake of my children, so they would never have to. I sacrificed my dignity so they could have a different future, and I will never allow them to repeat my past."»

The emotional testimony has generated mixed reactions online. While some social media users praised her honesty and the sacrifices she made for her family, others said her story highlights the harsh economic realities that have pushed many women into survival s*x work.

Others argued that regardless of how a parent earns a living, every child deserves the opportunity to grow up in dignity and escape the cycle of poverty.

Although Ma Madeleine did not disclose when she left s*x work or provide further details about her personal circumstances, her message was clear: she does not want her children—or any young person—to see prostitution as a solution to financial hardship.

Her story has become another reminder of the difficult choices many parents have made in pursuit of a better future for their children and has prompted fresh debate about the need for stronger social protection and economic opportunities for women in Cameroon.

Thousands of Foreigners Forced from Their Homes as Anti-Immigration Protests Rock South Africa.Thousands of foreign nati...
30/06/2026

Thousands of Foreigners Forced from Their Homes as Anti-Immigration Protests Rock South Africa.

Thousands of foreign nationals across South Africa were gripped by fear on Tuesday as anti-immigration protests swept through several cities, forcing many migrant families to flee their homes and seek shelter in the open amid freezing winter conditions.

Among those most affected were Malawian nationals, many of whom abandoned their homes after receiving threats from anti-migrant groups. Images from Durban showed women, children and elderly people sleeping on sidewalks and outside government offices with their belongings piled beside them. Some families reportedly burned clothes and other personal items to keep warm as overnight temperatures dropped.

The protests followed an unofficial June 30 deadline issued by anti-immigration groups demanding that undocumented foreign nationals leave South Africa. Demonstrations were held in cities including Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town, with protesters claiming that illegal immigration has contributed to rising unemployment, crime and pressure on public services.

Fearing a repeat of previous xenophobic attacks, many businesses closed, buses remained off the roads and countless foreign workers stayed away from work. Witnesses also reported that some landlords evicted foreign tenants because they feared their properties could be targeted by angry protesters.

South African authorities condemned any form of vigilantism, stressing that immigration enforcement is the responsibility of the government and not private citizens. Thousands of police officers were deployed across the country, while the military was placed on standby to prevent violence and protect lives and property. More than 100 criminal investigations linked to anti-migrant violence have already been opened.

The growing unrest has prompted several African governments, including Malawi, Zimbabwe and Mozambique, to assist citizens wishing to return home. Makeshift camps have emerged around Durban, where displaced migrants are waiting for transport arranged by their embassies. Many have left behind jobs, businesses and even family members in search of safety.

South Africa has witnessed repeated outbreaks of xenophobic violence over the past two decades. While anti-immigration groups argue that foreigners are responsible for many of the country's social and economic challenges, researchers say available evidence does not support claims that migrants are the main cause of unemployment or crime. Studies have found that migrants make up only a small percentage of South Africa's population and also contribute to the country's economy through work and business activities.

The latest developments have sparked concern across Africa, with human rights organisations urging the South African government to ensure the safety of all residents regardless of nationality. As thousands remain displaced and uncertain about their future, the crisis has renewed painful memories of past xenophobic attacks that claimed lives and damaged South Africa's reputation as a country founded on the principles of equality, dignity and human rights.

Deforestation Threatens Limbe’s Wildlife,  Birdlife, and Farmland. In Bimbia, where the popular slave trade village is s...
30/06/2026

Deforestation Threatens Limbe’s Wildlife, Birdlife, and Farmland.

In Bimbia, where the popular slave trade village is situated in the town of Limbe, farms now press against fragments of forest that once stretched deeper into the landscape, Pauline Sakwe— known in her community simply as Mama Pauline, says the mornings are no longer what they used to be.

“We used to hear birds all the time, especially in the early hours,” she said, standing near the edge of her farm. “Now it is not the same. The forest is going, and the sounds are going with it.”

Across Limbe and surrounding communities, that silence is becoming a warning sign.

According to research, conservationists, wildlife workers and environmental researchers say deforestation is steadily eroding one of Cameroon’s richest ecological zones — a landscape where rainforest, mangroves, volcanic slopes and coastal wetlands support wildlife, farming and fishing livelihoods at the same time. As forest cover thins around Bimbia, Bonadikombo, Bakingili, and other parts of Limbe, the effects are no longer confined to the bush. They are being felt in farms, along the coast, and in the growing strain between people and wildlife.

The damage is unfolding on at least three fronts at once: "wild animals are losing habitat, birds are losing nesting and feeding grounds, and the volcanic soil that sustains farming in Fako Division is becoming more exposed to erosion" said Awah Mayson, a Limbe based graduate from the Regional College of Agriculture Bambili.

A forest under pressure

Limbe sits within the wider forest belt of southwest Cameroon, part of the Guineo-Congolian rainforest system and the Cross-Sanaga region, an area recognized for exceptional biodiversity The Limbe Wildlife Centre, which rescues and rehabilitates animals seized from poaching and the illegal wildlife trade, says the wider region is home to some of the country’s most threatened species, including chimpanzees, putty-nosed monkeys and African grey parrots.

But the forests these animals depend on are under mounting pressure from small-scale farming, fuelwood harvesting, timber extraction, settlement expansion, and the steady spread of human activity into previously wooded areas. Along the coast, mangroves are also being cut for domestic fuel and fish smoking, a long-documented source of pressure on southwest Cameroon’s mangrove ecosystems.

For residents, the changes can appear gradual at first — a cleared patch here, a new farm there, fewer large trees, fewer birds, a hotter stretch of land. But for species that depend on continuous forest cover, those scattered cuts can amount to a major ecological rupture.

Primates lose the forest corridors they need

At the Limbe Wildlife Centre, staff working with rescued primates, Stanley says one of the most damaging consequences of deforestation is habitat fragmentation — the breaking up of once-connected forest into isolated patches.

Primates such as drills, chimpanzees, and several monkey species depend on intact or connected forest to move, forage, avoid predators, and maintain breeding populations. Once the canopy is cut into fragments, movement becomes harder, and groups can become separated from one another.

“When forests are split into smaller patches, animals lose the routes they use to move safely,” Sakwe John, a conservation worker familiar with primate rehabilitation in Limbe, said. “That means less access to food, separation amongst a particular species, and a greater chance of coming in contact with people.”

The Limbe Wildlife Centre cares for several of the species most affected by habitat destruction and wildlife trafficking, including chimpanzees, mona monkeys, and putty-nosed monkeys Its conservation material notes that the Cross-Sanaga region, where Limbe is located, is one of the most biologically important yet threatened forest systems in the country.

As habitat shrinks, wildlife is also more likely to live in farmlands and even roadside settlements as they search for food or passage.

Conservationists based on research say that when forest edges retreat, the line between wildlife habitat and human space becomes harder to maintain, increasing the possibility of crop damage, animal injury, or retaliatory killing.

Birds lose nesting trees and feeding grounds

If the disappearance of mammals is not always immediately visible, the decline in birdlife is often heard first.

In forest communities around Limbe, older residents and farmers increasingly describe a reduction in the calls of species once common in wooded areas.

"There are days I come to the farm without my watch or cell phone, especially during the raining season. So my means of knowing what says the time is through the clock bird as we call it. But I can't remember when last I heard the clock bird, " Madam Marie explained.

Bird species that rely on old, tall trees for nesting are especially vulnerable. African grey parrots, one of the region’s most iconic and threatened birds, depend on forest habitat and nest in tree cavities, often in large mature trees.
Loss of habitat, alongside trapping to be sold as pets, has brought about a major decline in their numbers across Central and West Africa.

The connection between forest loss and bird decline is straightforward: when large trees disappear, birds lose nesting sites, shelter, and feeding grounds. Species that depend on dense forest can quickly give way to more adaptable birds that tolerate open and disturbed landscapes.

Along the coast, the pressure extends to mangrove habitats as well.
Research in southwest Cameroon has shown that mangrove wood extraction for fish smoking and fuel has placed severe pressure on mangrove ecosystems, which serve as breeding and nursery grounds for fish and other aquatic life.
These same mangroves also provide habitat for bird species and help stabilize fragile coastal environments.

What can still be saved

Despite the pressure, conservationists say the situation is not beyond repair — but it will require acting before the remaining forest fragments become too degraded to recover.

In and around Limbe, responses are already taking shape, though unevenly. Reforestation campaigns, mangrove restoration efforts, and agroforestry projects that encourage farmers to plant and retain shade trees are increasingly being promoted as practical ways to protect both livelihoods and biodiversity.

NGOs involved in environmental works such as CAMCOF- Cameroon Mountains Conservation Foundation and others carry out the operation 1 tree campaign where they encourage and teach locals how to plant trees.

Wildlife education campaigns also continue to stress that saving threatened species can not be separated from saving habitat.

For communities, that message is becoming harder to ignore.

A forest is not only a place where animals live. In Limbe, it is part of what keeps farms productive, fish breeding grounds functioning, and local temperatures bearable. It stores water, shields fragile soils, and gives threatened wildlife somewhere to survive outside their cages

Back in Bimbia, another local Mr. Mofor Aaron, on his way to his farm, said the concern is no longer abstract. He sees it in the heat on cleared land, in the shades that have been reduced, and in the thinning line of trees that once stood beyond his farm.

“If the forest finishes,” he said quietly, “everybody will feel it.”

That may be the clearest warning of all. In Limbe, deforestation is no longer only about trees falling in distant forest patches. It is about what disappears with them — the birds, the wildlife, the soil, and the fragile environmental balance on which entire communities depend.

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