
Marafa Hamidou Yaya, former
Secretary General at the Presidency, former Minister of State, Minister of
Territorial Administration and Decentralization who belonged to the chosen few
that were privy to state secrets has decided to become the latest prolific
writer in prison, dishing out calculated dozes of state secrets to the
admiration of the public and the chagrin of government. When Marafa Hamidou
Yaya who was arrested along side former Prime Minister, Chief Ephraim Inoni
fired his first salvo by writing an open letter to the Head of State in which
he made incriminating revelations about his dealings with the Head of State and
the functioning of the state, many ministers started trembling. This was so
because many of them who equally had some dealings with Marafa when he was in
government did not know how far he could go in his letters. AS Secretary
General at the Presidency and former Minister of State, Minister of Territorial
Administration, Marafa had a lot of influence and connections with a network
that the regime does not clearly master. Many of those serving in
government and in many duty posts in the administration are Marafa’s men. What
they have in store nobody knows reason the regime is trembling because if they
are still loyal to Marafa, they can destabilize the state. And while the
regime was yet to digest the first letter and look for means to counter it,
Marafa pumped another letter that was considered very disastrous to the regime
as it picked holes in the promulgated electoral code. This is where Marafa has
drawn sympathy from the opposition political parties that boycotted the voting
of the promulgated electoral code. Equally, this can compromise funding of the
electoral process by foreign donors not to talk of the international
recognition of any election emanating from such an electoral code. These are
issues the regime does not like and Marafa knows that, reason he is only
targeting issues the government has never wanted to be in the open.
When News Breaks Out, We Break In. Minute by Minute Report on Cameroon and Africa
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