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Monday, April 16, 2018

Apply for PhD Scholarship Opportunities in France, Australia, Belgium, UK and Canada

Saturday, April 14, 2018

New in Yaounde: Chop and Carry

Welcome to Chop & Carry Fast Food

We combine energy & style to satisfy the ultimate consumer.

Talk of Innovative entrepreneurship, the first name that comes to mind nowadays is Ndinjo Stanley Awudu, the initiator of "Chop and Carry" fast food. Chop and Carry is making waves. It is a name worth memorizing to anyone who feeds the body that does the work. In short, Chop and Carry has shortened all kitchen huddles and above all, taken the most appropriate measures to ensure that the food you eat gives you the satisfaction. There is nothing better than getting a ready meal on the table. At Chop and Carry everything is 100% natural. African and exotic dishes all (bio) such as Water fofo ad Eru, Achu and yellow soup, Ekwang, Fofo corn, njamama and Kha’ati kha’ati, rice in several forms etc.
Besides Food, Chop and Carry also provides 100% natural juice
Visit Chop and Carry to tell others or call the mobile service and you are served, at home in the office, etc.
.
If you are in Yaounde place your order now
Order lines:
 677581775,
672385836,
677759497.


Ndinjo Stanley Awudu



*Advertorial


When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

UEFA Champions League Draw: Real Madrid Gets Tough Semi Final Opponent

Real Madrid has been handed a very tough team, as the UEFA Champions League semi-final draw was held today.
UCL Draw
 
The UEFA Champions League semi-final draw has been held. The games will be played on April 24/25 and May 1/2. Liverpool will face Roma as Mohamed Salah squares up to his former club.
 
Spanish giant, Real Madrid will lock horns with Bayern Munich for the 12th time in what has been dubbed a 'European Clasico'.



When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Bayern Names Its New Manager

Top German club, Bayern Munich has finally announced a new manager to replace outgoing Jupp Heynckes.

Bayern hire Niko Kovac from Eintracht Frankfurt
 
Eintracht Frankfurt coach Niko Kovac has been announced by Bayern Munich as their new manager and successor  to Jupp Heynckes from 1 July.
 
“Niko was a player at Bayern, he is very familiar with the people involved as well as the structure and the DNA of the club,” said Bayern sporting director Hasan Salihamidzic.

“We are convinced that he is the right coach for the future of Bayern.”
 
The 46-year-old Croatian will start a three-year contract from July 1, the club announced just minutes before Friday’s Champions League semi-finals draw which left the Bundesliga champions pitted against holders Real Madrid.
 
A close friend of Salihamidzic, Kovac will also bring his 44-year-old brother Robert Kovac from Frankfurt as assistant coach.
 
Born in Berlin to Croatian parents, both brothers played for the Croatian national team as well as Bayern.
 
The elder Kovac was also coach of the Croatian team with his brother as assistant manager.
 
Bayern did not reveal the cost of poaching Kovac, but both Bild and Sport Bild claimed that his departure before the end of his Frankfurt contract in 2019 would cost Bayern 2.2 million euros ($2.7 million).
 
Both Frankfurt and Bayern last week denied that Kovac was on his way to Munich.
 
Kovac himself also said that “there is no reason to doubt that I will be the coach of Frankfurt next season”.
 
-NAN


When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Thursday, April 12, 2018

How Many More People Must Die for this War to End?


Courtesy: The Colbert Factor

This reflection is provoked by the fact that although everybody seem to be calling for dialogue as the surest way to end the now bloody Anglophone crisis, the situation on the ground seems to be moving from bad to worse. The cliff hanger situation has reached a level where whole neighborhoods and streets of our villagers and semi urban areas are all painted with blood, pain and wailing. No one family seems to be spared. The reflection is also inspired by the fact even a once little known locality like Sowi, situated off the jaws of Anyajua in Belo Sub Division, has only in the last few weeks, become a veritable symbol of Anglophone Far-Right extremists resistance. It is the more informed by the fact that although all of humanity is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the death and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., the father of non violent resistance, Cameroonians who have hitherto been reputed for being
gentlemanly, have rather indulged themselves in the worst form of beastiality that rubbishes the sacrosanct principle of the sanctity of human blood. This reflection, to say the least, is a cry for our beloved nation. If after the passion, crucifixion, death and resurrection of Christ, Cameroonians are fighting and spilling human blood, it means they are re-nailing Christ on the cross.
Truth is, those who are standing on the shadows of Martin Luther King and spilling human blood are to say the least, anathema. In the same light, all those trigger happy security operatives spilling innocent blood are also anathema. No responsible government can pride itself, the way Cameroon government is doing, of successfully and professionally killing its citizens, however extremists they have become. The President of the Republic and all the government officials may send as many congratulatory messages to Forces of Law and Order for what it calls their professionalism.  When the chips are down
and the costs are counted, it would be known who  professional and who was not. When the military shoots and wounds innocent civilians in Belo and Anyajua and block their being transported to hospital so they die of gun wounds, it is easy to know who is professional and who is not. Never in the history of war faring have the wounded been denied access to hospitals. In the South west, news abound to the effect that the wounded, even when they succeed to access a medical facility, are sometimes pulled out from hospital by rampaging soldiers and allowed to bleed to death. Oh, the sanctity of human blood. As Belo came under siege, eyewitnesses report of the military shooting at close range at a bike transporting a patient and caregiver to Mbingo hospital. The patient and caregiver later died. Call it collateral damage and you would have to explain why Amba boys are lodged at distant Sowi but Belo is paying the price.
 As we celebrate the 50th anniversary
the assassination of Martin Luther King, the father of non violent direct action, we are naturally tempted to ask why this sudden rise in extreme radicalism in Anglophone Cameroon. We are all agreed to the fact that injustices that have been meted on Anglophones since independence are to say the least, heartrending. Facts and figures to support the point have been demonstrated in triumphant detail. But if we were truly walking on the footsteps of Martin Luther King Jr, we would have known as he put it that: 'When you are right you cannot be too radical, when you are wrong, you cannot be too conservative'. 
According to Martin Luther, the man on whose shadow the suffering and marginalised Anglophones work today, '...darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that'. He was also of the opinion that 'hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that'. One of his most quotable quotes: 'Nonviolence is a powerful and just weapon. Indeed, it is a weapon unique
in history, which cuts without wounding and ennobles the man who wields it'. Some of the speeches and reflections of Martin Luther, as reproduced in last Thursday's edition of The Guardian Post, directly address themselves to the current situation in Anglophone Cameroon. Hear him: ' Man must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love'. And for him to enthuse that 'wars are poor chisels for carving out peaceful tomorrows'.
So, how many more people would have to die for this war to end? Both the government in Yaoundé and the Ambazonian interim governing council would have to provide answers. The highest I can do at my level is to ask the tough questions on purpose. I belong to the tiny minority that believes that there is nothing wrong with Cameroon that cannot be corrected by what is right with Cameroon and that the starting point could be a return to the 1961 arrangement. For those who bask in their ignorance by claiming that leads to secession,
I urge them to read emerging literature pointing to the fact that federalism did not lead to secession in Cameroon. It was rather the abolishment of federalism that led to the nursing of the germs of secession. That's one of the messages that the Northwest clergy, trade unions and civil society handed down to the visiting French diplomat the other week in Bamenda. We have heard and seen government ministers file past here in Bamenda claiming and/ or shouting about how government is out for peace and dialogue. But they ignore the reasoned advice of Martin Luther King to the effect that ' It is not enough to say we must not wage war. It is necessary to love peace and sacrifice for it'.
I ask again: How many more people must die for this war to end? Killing, either by Far Right extremist Amba Forces or by regular government forces, is evil. It is but tampering with the sanctity of human blood. It is evil and should be condemned by all right thinking people. Martin Luther King whom this reflection is dedicated to, once declared that: 'He who passively accepts evil is as much involved as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it'.
For the past two years,Anglophones have been so restless in their attempt to drink from the riverof freedom and liberty that they, like the two men in the Easter story of the journey to Emmaus who were unable to recognize the risen Jesus, are unable to realize that God has been journeying with them. Like Jesus who refused to reveal himself to Claupas and his companion on that journey, God may be refusing the quick solutions we propose to the Anglophone crisis because he has a better plan for Cameroonian. A plan which  maybe that in trying to free themselves, they also open the eyes of francophones and free them from the bondage of always thinking that government is always right and the giver of freedoms.
Once again, how many more people must die for this war to end? As you
put in your effort at your level to genuinely answer the question in memory of Martin Luther King's legacy, I, on my part, proposes a March for Peace with placards carrying the names of those who have been killed, both civilian and military that we know, as well as chain prayers for Cameroon.
That was the Muteff Boy's Take.

When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

This Week Latest Scholarships in China, UK


Find below Fresh Scholarship opportunities around the world. Apply for them now.

 

When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)

How Facebook's growth banked on users opening doors to their data

Whenever you log into your Facebook account, you voluntarily share hoards of personal data with the company -- which is collected, packaged and sold to other companies for profit.
Selling information about the personal habits of its 1 billion users has been the business practice of Facebook for several years, but it has come under scrutiny in recent weeks, leading to CEO Mark Zuckerberg to appear before House and Senate committees this week.

Commonwealth Games: Eight Cameroon Athletes "Dans le Sosongho"

 Eight Cameroon athletes competing at the Commonwealth Games in Australia have gone missing.

The World's Oldest Man Is 112 Years

A 112-year-old Japanese national has been recognized as the world's oldest living man according to the Guinness World Records.

Masazo Nonaka

Miracles Show: Prophet Reportedly 'Turns Water Into Petrol'

 A popular prophet has reportedly turned water into petrol inside church during a service as the worshipers watch on.

 
The bottles of water reportedly caught fire

Climate Change: China Introduces Technology To Force Rainfall


China has proved it mettle in technology and research as it moves to alter the weather condition to cause heavy rainfall.
 
File Photo
Since 2013 China has been creating 55 billion tons of artificial rain a year. 

Monday, April 9, 2018

Thousands Pay Last Homage to Mama Rose Murkwi



Add caption
On Saturday April 7, 2018, thousands of people from all walks of attended the funeral service at the Revival Baptist Church Binju in Nkambe, Donga Mantung of the North West Region to pay their last respect to Mama Rose Murkwi. Binju quarter was a beehive of celebrations as it hosted dignitaries from across the country as they all trooped in Binju from the fours of Nkambe town to honour and celebrate the life of one of the earliest committed Christian of the Revival Baptist church Binju, and a choir member (Mother of the famous Chief Executive Officer of the Construction Company BOFAS, Godlove Talla Nji alias Kobo Godlove).
In fact everyone was present from administrators to politicians, clergies, contractors to traders, teachers, lawyers, buy’am sell’am etc.
Among the high profile personalities that attended the funeral service was the Senior Divisional Officer for Donga Mantung Division, Nkwenti Simon Doh, Hon. Awudu Mbaya, Hon. Esther Ngala, H.E Shey Jones Yembe, H.E Ngafeeson Emmanuel, Senator Kombongsi, Njong Eric and hundreds other dignities who were buried in the crowd of mourners. There was also the remarkable presence of the Archbishop of the Kumbo diocese and the landlord himself, the mayor of Nkambe, Ngabir Paul Bantar.  
The mood that saluted Mama Rose funeral service from Christian Wake keep to church service was befitting and worth the celebration. 
Delivering his sermon, Pastor Bombang Valentine said Mama Rose Murkwi served God devotedly while alive from all the testimonies given by people and from his personal relationship with her while alive as her Pastor. He called on the kingdom seekers to be prepared at all times because “there is only one room in hell but many in heaven”.  He charged Christians and mourners to be of good behaviour, describing death as unavoidable circumstance in life but went further to caution that everybody is only praying for long life. “When challenges come don’t shake in faith, we are looking forward to new heaven and earth” he continued.
Pastor Valentine enjoined Christians to work in the way of the Lord if they want to enjoy their lives, as well as, inherit the Kingdom of God added that late Mama Rose Murkwi lived a fulfilled life. “It is better for you to believe in Jesus and die not see him than not to believe to die and discover you are far from seeing him”.
He urged her children to imitate the good virtues of their late mother in all ramifications.
Pastor Valentine after drawing inspiration from 2 Peter 3:12-14 and on the Meditation “Making the best use of the Kingdom people” charged the congregation and by extension Christians to see this world as vanity and ephemeral saying the best that human beings can do is to serve God. “Give time to God the creator” he emphasized.
Enter Godlove Talla Nji
Before presenting his eulogy, the second son of the family Godlove Talla Nji aka Kobbo Godlove used the occasion to present to the public Mr. Njong Eric (Buns) whom he said has been very instrumental to his life. He said Njong Eric is “a father, a friend and a partner in business. If I am what I am today, my parents just gave birth to me and when I went into the world, he held me by my hand”.
He said his mother is no more. It is her flesh that is no more but her spirit is alive. Drawing inspiration from Ecclesiastic 3:4, Godlove Talla Nji said the Bible teaches that “there is time to mourn and there is time to rejoice”.  While welcoming everyone who turned out to bid farewell to their deceased mother, he reminded them that they did not come to mourn but rather they should join them to celebrate. “We are not celebrating Mami but we are celebrating God through Jesus Christ”. He said the best gift he gave his mother before he departure to eternity was the fact that he(Godlove) accepted Christ. “I gave her in less than two years what I could not give her after working for 16 years”. He added that Exodus 20:12 teaches us that “Children honour your parents and your mothers”. This he said that is the only commandment with a promise. “I think it is because of that promise that we are all gathered here today and at the same time Mark 10:15, the Bible says “if you don’t accept the Kingdom of Christ as a child, you cannot enter it”. He recalled how in 2016 God sent one of his servants to him asking him to reconcile with his mother. He was surprised that how can someone tell him to reconcile with the mother when they hadn’t any friction. To cut the story short, Godlove testified that for 16 years she was only giving her mother material things whereas what she needed of him was to accept the kingdom of God.
He said he is satisfied that his mother played her part and did her best according to the will of God saying that her mother taught him and other siblings the way of God. He said he is sure Jesus has given his mother peace. He went further to tell the Biblical story of how Jesus healed a blind man on Sabbath day and to the Pharisees he was a sinner but to the blind man whether it was on Sabbath day or whatever, his joy was that he could see again. Harping on the impact of the person who transformed him, Godlove said whether Esther Ella Ze is a fake prophet or what, the reasons is that she made him to see Jesus and more so to give her mother her most cherished gift which was to believe in God. My mother was a poor woman but she always wanted that the day she will die her burial should be a celebration. “So we are just celebrating her life through Jesus Christ which means that it is a life well spent. Jesus is alive and God is alive”.
In a written eulogy, he writes “ Mama others will mourn you but be rest assured that I will remind them that when someone succeeds in fighting a good fight (2 Timothy 4:7) it calls for celebration not mourning: you were a hardworking farmer who should be the first to enjoy the fruit of her labour (2 Timothy 2:6)

Kup Dance, Nka Abee, Mama Rose’s Best Friend Speak Out
Speaker after speaker described Mami Rose as hardworking family head that lived by her words. To all the speakers, Mama Rose Murkwi was frank, honest and someone who spare no efforts to give a piece of advice whenever need arises. She was a problem solver and one that many always look back as in the community and in various groups as a role model mother. Each and everyone shared their memories of the deceased but the most outstanding central was that Mama Rose was a devoted person and very dynamic woman.
Talking to this reporter after the burial, Hon. Awudu Mbaya described the departed heroine as a role model whose hard work has changed lives. Hon. Esther Ngala on her part said Mama Rose’s story is one that will inspire several generations. “She is a good example of a courageous woman” Hon. Esther Ngala added. To H.E Emmanuel Ngafeeson, Mama Rose lives in the Lord and her trappings will forever be remembered. “Just the crowd here can tell you the role she played in Community development”, Mbunkur Julius says.

What You Need to Know about Mama Rose Murkwi
Born in 1940 in Jirt village, Ndu sub Division, into the family of Fai Nganyinkfu and Ngwaakfu (all of blessed memory), who lived a sedimentary life; Mama Rose Murkwi grew up with her only lone sister assisting her in farm work. In the early 40s, education was a rare commodity and luxury and most parents preferred that their children should accompany them in farming than sending them to far distant areas to learn book.
However, in 1957 her desire to build a home linked her to Elijah Nji Kubo of blessed memory and they both decided to get married after fulfilling all the traditional commitments and other dowry rights.
In 1958, the couple was blessed with their first child who survived only for a few months same like the second, third and when in 1962, she gave birth to her fourth child, Patience; it was the end of the death syndrome. The couple was later blessed with Peter Nfor, Wilson Ndi, Godlove Talla, Ida Boka, George Ngala, Angela She and the Benjamin of the house Emmanuel Ndang. But since it is only God who knows why, Mami Rose lost three of her children who were already adults; Ida, Wilson and Patience. Her trust in God, and devotion to the words of God did make her lost faith in the Almighty. Even when she lost her husband, she became the mother and father of the house.
It is worth mentioning that Mama Rose Murkwi was a very hard working woman who relied solely on farming and petit trading principally the selling of puff puff and other perishables from which she raise money to educate her children, pay hospital bills and even bought a piece of land which is the family residence in which all her children, grand children and great grand children live today.  
Those who lived in Nkambe between 1970 and year 2000 would tell you of her puff puff and how caring she was in customer service as well as her family. George Ngala Nji in his eulogy writes “No matter the hard times, there was never a day we came back home and didn’t find food because your energy and sense of providing was constant”. To Emmanuel Kobo, the Benjamin of the house, his mother was his private lawyer during any family matter. “At the age of 10 years” he writes “  I understood the principles of buyam sellam as you had groomed me since the age of 3 as I spent each day watching you get up at 3 am make puff puff so that we could something to eat and basic education. You were in fact a father in my life while dad played the mother role of being soft and pampering me even when I was wrong. We have grown up to be very enterprising because you thought us the genesis of business management”. Harping on the motherly love, her daughter says “growing up, I learnt building a home no matter the difficulties because that is what you taught me....You showed us the true values and responsibilities of a rave woman in the construction of every successful family”. 
Mama Rose Murkwi it should be emphasized lived and died as a devoted militant of the CPDM. When the wind of change swept over Donga Mantung Division in the early 90s, she was one of the few who remained steadfast in the CPDM. She was a resilient grassroot militant. Besides that she was also a committed Christian of the Cameroon Baptist Church, very active member of the women’s movement of the CBC and choir member of Binju Baptist church.
Socially, it was not for nothing that the leader of the Binju Kup Dance Group was one of those who gave testimony about her life. Mama Rose was to Kup Dance Group like a pillar on which group members lean their shoulders. She was a mobilizer, adviser and above all, one of the four pillars of that group.
Mama would be remembered by many as a veritable community leader, a mixer and one who has left her footprints in the sand of time. She leaves behind five children, son in law, daughters in law, grand and great grand children to mourn after her. She will above all be remembered for her modesty, self sufficiency, outspokenness and reserved life, a veritable woman emancipator and societal role model every woman would like to be like.

Burial in Binka
At about 1:30 pm, after thousands of mourners were treated to sumptuous feeding in different places at Binju, all roads led to Ninkong quarter in Binka. The euphoria was total as several dance groups. There was singing and dancing though the pains could be very visible in the faces of the immediate family members as tears keep running across their faces. No one could have captured such a difficult moment more than Mami Rose’s daughter, Angela Seh who writes “though I am crying, its tears of joy because I know you left behind a happy family and saw your kids reconciled as one like any mother would wish”.
In fact, every living thing in Ninkong felt an extraordinary presence of people around them, this just to testify that a heroine has left to eternity.
y their last respect to Mama Rose Murkwi. Binju quarter was a beehive of celebrations as it hosted dignitaries from across the country as they all trooped in Binju from the fours of Nkambe town to honour and celebrate the life of one of the earliest committed Christian of the Revival Baptist church Binju, and a choir member (Mother of the famous Chief Executive Officer of the Construction Company BOFAS, Godlove Talla Nji alias Kobo Godlove).

In fact everyone was present from administrators to politicians, clergies, contractors to traders, teachers, lawyers, buy’am sell’am etc.
Among the high profile personalities that attended the funeral service was the Senior Divisional Officer for Donga Mantung Division, Nkwenti Simon Doh, Hon. Awudu Mbaya, Hon. Esther Ngala, H.E Shey Jones Yembe, H.E Ngafeeson Emmanuel, Senator Kombongsi, Njong Eric and hundreds other dignities who were buried in the crowd of mourners. There was also the remarkable presence of the Archbishop of the Kumbo diocese and the landlord himself, the mayor of Nkambe, Ngabir Paul Bantar.  
The mood that saluted Mama Rose funeral service from Christian Wake keep to church service was befitting and worth the celebration. 
Delivering his sermon, Pastor Bombang Valentine said Mama Rose Murkwi served God devotedly while alive from all the testimonies given by people and from his personal relationship with her while alive as her Pastor. He called on the kingdom seekers to be prepared at all times because “there is only one room in hell but many in heaven”.  He charged Christians and mourners to be of good behaviour, describing death as unavoidable circumstance in life but went further to caution that everybody is only praying for long life. “When challenges come don’t shake in faith, we are looking forward to new heaven and earth” he continued.
Pastor Valentine enjoined Christians to work in the way of the Lord if they want to enjoy their lives, as well as, inherit the Kingdom of God added that late Mama Rose Murkwi lived a fulfilled life. “It is better for you to believe in Jesus and die not see him than not to believe to die and discover you are far from seeing him”.
He urged her children to imitate the good virtues of their late mother in all ramifications.
Pastor Valentine after drawing inspiration from 2 Peter 3:12-14 and on the Meditation “Making the best use of the Kingdom people” charged the congregation and by extension Christians to see this world as vanity and ephemeral saying the best that human beings can do is to serve God. “Give time to God the creator” he emphasized. 
Enter Godlove Talla Nji
Godlove Talla Nji
Before presenting his eulogy, the second son of the family Godlove Talla Nji aka Kobbo Godlove used the occasion to present to the public Mr. Njong Eric (Buns) whom he said has been very instrumental to his life. He said Njong Eric is “a father, a friend and a partner in business. If I am what I am today, my parents just gave birth to me and when I went into the world, he held me by my hand”.
He said his mother is no more. It is her flesh that is no more but her spirit is alive. Drawing inspiration from Ecclesiastic 3:4, Godlove Talla Nji said the Bible teaches that “there is time to mourn and there is time to rejoice”.  While welcoming everyone who turned out to bid farewell to their deceased mother, he reminded them that they did not come to mourn but rather they should join them to celebrate. “We are not celebrating Mami but we are celebrating God through Jesus Christ”. He said the best gift he gave his mother before he departure to eternity was the fact that he(Godlove) accepted Christ. “I gave her in less than two years what I could not give her after working for 16 years”. He added that Exodus 20:12 teaches us that “Children honour your parents and your mothers”. This he said that is the only commandment with a promise. “I think it is because of that promise that we are all gathered here today and at the same time Mark 10:15, the Bible says “if you don’t accept the Kingdom of Christ as a child, you cannot enter it”. He recalled how in 2016 God sent one of his servants to him asking him to reconcile with his mother. He was surprised that how can someone tell him to reconcile with the mother when they hadn’t any friction. To cut the story short, Godlove testified that for 16 years she was only giving her mother material things whereas what she needed of him was to accept the kingdom of God.
He said he is satisfied that his mother played her part and did her best according to the will of God saying that her mother taught him and other siblings the way of God. He said he is sure Jesus has given his mother peace. He went further to tell the Biblical story of how Jesus healed a blind man on Sabbath day and to the Pharisees he was a sinner but to the blind man whether it was on Sabbath day or whatever, his joy was that he could see again. Harping on the impact of the person who transformed him, Godlove said whether Esther Ella Ze is a fake prophet or what, the reasons is that she made him to see Jesus and more so to give her mother her most cherished gift which was to believe in God. My mother was a poor woman but she always wanted that the day she will die her burial should be a celebration. “So we are just celebrating her life through Jesus Christ which means that it is a life well spent. Jesus is alive and God is alive”.
In a written eulogy, he writes “ Mama others will mourn you but be rest assured that I will remind them that when someone succeeds in fighting a good fight (2 Timothy 4:7) it calls for celebration not mourning: you were a hardworking farmer who should be the first to enjoy the fruit of her labour (2 Timothy 2:6)

Kup Dance, Nka Abee, Mama Rose’s Best Friend Speak Out
Speaker after speaker described Mami Rose as hardworking family head that lived by her words. To all the speakers, Mama Rose Murkwi was frank, honest and someone who spare no efforts to give a piece of advice whenever need arises. She was a problem solver and one that many always look back as in the community and in various groups as a role model mother. Each and everyone shared their memories of the deceased but the most outstanding central was that Mama Rose was a devoted person and very dynamic woman.
Talking to this reporter after the burial, Hon. Awudu Mbaya described the departed heroine as a role model whose hard work has changed lives. Hon. Esther Ngala on her part said Mama Rose’s story is one that will inspire several generations. “She is a good example of a courageous woman” Hon. Esther Ngala added. To H.E Emmanuel Ngafeeson, Mama Rose lives in the Lord and her trappings will forever be remembered. “Just the crowd here can tell you the role she played in Community development”, Mbunkur Julius says.

What You Need to Know about Mama Rose Murkwi
Born in 1940 in Jirt village, Ndu sub Division, into the family of Fai Nganyinkfu and Ngwaakfu (all of blessed memory), who lived a sedimentary life; Mama Rose Murkwi grew up with her only lone sister assisting her in farm work. In the early 40s, education was a rare commodity and luxury and most parents preferred that their children should accompany them in farming than sending them to far distant areas to learn book.
However, in 1957 her desire to build a home linked her to Elijah Nji Kubo of blessed memory and they both decided to get married after fulfilling all the traditional commitments and other dowry rights.
In 1958, the couple was blessed with their first child who survived only for a few months same like the second, third and when in 1962, she gave birth to her fourth child, Patience; it was the end of the death syndrome. The couple was later blessed with Peter Nfor, Wilson Ndi, Godlove Talla, Ida Boka, George Ngala, Angela She and the Benjamin of the house Emmanuel Ndang. But since it is only God who knows why, Mami Rose lost three of her children who were already adults; Ida, Wilson and Patience. Her trust in God, and devotion to the words of God did make her lost faith in the Almighty. Even when she lost her husband, she became the mother and father of the house.
It is worth mentioning that Mama Rose Murkwi was a very hard working woman who relied solely on farming and petit trading principally the selling of puff puff and other perishables from which she raise money to educate her children, pay hospital bills and even bought a piece of land which is the family residence in which all her children, grand children and great grand children live today.  
Those who lived in Nkambe between 1970 and year 2000 would tell you of her puff puff and how caring she was in customer service as well as her family. George Ngala Nji in his eulogy writes “No matter the hard times, there was never a day we came back home and didn’t find food because your energy and sense of providing was constant”. To Emmanuel Kobo, the Benjamin of the house, his mother was his private lawyer during any family matter. “At the age of 10 years” he writes “  I understood the principles of buyam sellam as you had groomed me since the age of 3 as I spent each day watching you get up at 3 am make puff puff so that we could something to eat and basic education. You were in fact a father in my life while dad played the mother role of being soft and pampering me even when I was wrong. We have grown up to be very enterprising because you thought us the genesis of business management”. Harping on the motherly love, her daughter says “growing up, I learnt building a home no matter the difficulties because that is what you taught me....You showed us the true values and responsibilities of a rave woman in the construction of every successful family”. 
Mama Rose Murkwi it should be emphasized lived and died as a devoted militant of the CPDM. When the wind of change swept over Donga Mantung Division in the early 90s, she was one of the few who remained steadfast in the CPDM. She was a resilient grassroot militant. Besides that she was also a committed Christian of the Cameroon Baptist Church, very active member of the women’s movement of the CBC and choir member of Binju Baptist church.
Socially, it was not for nothing that the leader of the Binju Kup Dance Group was one of those who gave testimony about her life. Mama Rose was to Kup Dance Group like a pillar on which group members lean their shoulders. She was a mobilizer, adviser and above all, one of the four pillars of that group.
Mama would be remembered by many as a veritable community leader, a mixer and one who has left her footprints in the sand of time. She leaves behind five children, son in law, daughters in law, grand and great grand children to mourn after her. She will above all be remembered for her modesty, self sufficiency, outspokenness and reserved life, a veritable woman emancipator and societal role model every woman would like to be like.

Burial in Binka
At about 1:30 pm, after thousands of mourners were treated to sumptuous feeding in different places at Binju, all roads led to Ninkong quarter in Binka. The euphoria was total as several dance groups. There was singing and dancing though the pains could be very visible in the faces of the immediate family members as tears keep running across their faces. No one could have captured such a difficult moment more than Mami Rose’s daughter, Angela Seh who writes “though I am crying, its tears of joy because I know you left behind a happy family and saw your kids reconciled as one like any mother would wish”.
In fact, every living thing in Ninkong felt an extraordinary presence of people around them, this just to testify that a heroine has left to eternity.

(Coming up next  PhotoNews of the Burial ceremony )








When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)