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26 March 2026
Cameroon launches CONVERGEFOOD Joint Programme to accelerate food systems transformation
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25 March 2026
The U-Reporters are leading the response against polio in the North and Far North of Cameroon
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25 March 2026
Hadja: Stitching a New Life, One Point at a Time
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The Sustainable Development Goals in Cameroon
The Sustainable Development Goals are a global call to action to end poverty, protect the earth’s environment and climate, and ensure that people everywhere can enjoy peace and prosperity. These are the goals the UN is working on in Serbia:
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27 February 2026
United Nations Cameroon Country Team Annual Retreat 2026: A Moment of Strategic Renewal
From 3 to 5 February 2026, the United Nations Country Team (UNCT) in Cameroon gathered at Hôtel United in Yaoundé for its annual retreat. More than a routine institutional gathering, the retreat marked a deliberate pause—an opportunity to reflect, recalibrate, and renew collective ambition at a critical juncture for both Cameroon and the UN system.Setting the SceneCameroon stands at a complex crossroads. The country continues to navigate the aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic, global geopolitical tensions, volatile commodity markets, and tightening fiscal space. Security challenges in the North West, South West, and Far North weigh heavily on communities, while poverty and inequality remain pressing concerns. Yet, amid these difficulties, opportunities are emerging: sustainable food systems, inclusive industrialization, renewable energy expansion, investment in human capital, digital transformation, and climate adaptation.The retreat provided a safe space to confront these realities and to position the UN as a catalyst for systemic and sustainable change and daring to dream of envision what comes next. Voices Around the Table The opening day brought together representatives from the Government of Cameroon, technical and financial partners, and members of the diplomatic corps. Their presence underscored the importance of collaboration and reinforced a central message: the UN’s work in Cameroon is inseparable from a broader ecosystem of national and international actors committed to shared development goals.Their presence underscored the importance of collaboration and reinforced the idea that the UN’s work in Cameroon is part of a broader collective effort. Their participation reinforced a central message: the UN’s work in Cameroon is inseparable from a broader ecosystem of national and international actors committed to shared development goals.Over three days, UNCT members engaged in deep conversations. They asked hard questions: How can the UNCT sharpen its collective impact and avoid fragmentation? How do we ensure that our work truly reaches those most in need? How do we prepare for the next Cooperation Framework to be more systemic, integrated, and future-oriented? Strategic Commitments for 2026The UNCT agreed on a focused set of time-bound priority actions for 2026, each assigned clear leadership, deliverables, and monitoring mechanisms under the UNCT governance structure.Key commitments includeThe UNCT pledged to:• Mobilize and diversify resources through innovative financing instruments and stronger public private partnerships.• Accelerate digital transformation and UN2.0 principles, integrating AI, data, and foresight into programming and operations. • Strengthen internal and external coordination, supported by clear performance indicators and enhanced Delivering as One mechanisms.• Prepare strategically for the next Cooperation Framework (2027–2031), anchored in the 5Ps: People, Prosperity, Peace, Planet, Partnership.• Promote inclusion and gender equality.• Build staff capacities in areas like AI and strategic foresight.• Enhance strategic communication, storytelling, and visibility to strengthen credibility and stakeholder trust.To ensure accountability, these commitments will be monitored through a dedicated reporting framework, under the oversight of the UNCT and with operational follow-up by the Programme Management Team (PMT).A Human Centered VisionBeyond frameworks and strategic matrices, the retreat placed people at the center of the conversation. Discussions focused on addressing structural drivers of vulnerability, ensuring sustainable humanitarian transitions, and positioning youth and women not merely as beneficiaries, but as agents of transformationon how to address the root causes of vulnerability, ensure humanitarian transitions are sustainable, and place youth and women at the heart of change.As one participant reflected: “This retreat reminds us that our work is not only about numbers—it is about lives, hopes, and futures.”Looking Ahead The Yaoundé retreat concluded with renewed clarity, collective ownership, and strengthened governance mechanisms. The commitments made will guide the UNCT through 2026 and lay the foundation for the next Cooperation Framework. In a context of global uncertainty and national complexity, the retreat reaffirmed a simple yet powerful conviction: Cameroon’s path toward sustainable emergence must be built collectively—with resilience, accountability, solidarity, and a steadfast commitment to leave no one behind.
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07 January 2026
The Girls’ Movement in Cameroon: When Girls Speak Up to Shape the Future
When Aïssatou takes the microphone, the crowd falls silent. Around her, hundreds of girls listen. She takes a breath, then speaks about her village, the school she had to leave, the fears she kept inside for so long. And then about that day when, for the first time, someone asked her a simple but decisive question: “What do you want for your future?” That day, Aïssatou, 16, became one of the voices of the Girls’ Movement in Cameroon.Persistent Challenges, One Shared UrgencyIn Cameroon, girls make up nearly a quarter of the population. Yet for many of them, growing up means facing obstacles: early marriage and pregnancy, gender-based violence, limited access to education and health services, and the impacts of humanitarian and security crises.
“Too often, decisions that affect girls’ lives are made without them,” reminds Nadine Perrault the UNICEF Representative in Cameroon. “The Girls’ Movement is based on a simple but powerful principle: girls are not just beneficiaries; they are legitimate agents of change.”
This vision gave birth to Girls’ Vision for the Future – Girls’ Movement, an initiative led by UNICEF, the Government of Cameroon, and numerous partners, to make girls key actors of change and essential voices in public policies that concern them.A Nationwide Mobilization Led by Girls Themselves In 2025, a national caravan traveled across Cameroon’s ten regions, meeting girls in urban, rural, remote, and crisis-affected areas. More than 5,600 girls, from all walks of life, internally displaced, refugees, girls with disabilities, adolescents in and out of school,spoke up in safe spaces. They shared their realities, expressed their priorities, and voiced their dreams.
Aïcha recalls: “That day, we weren’t judged. We were listened to.”
To strengthen unity and belonging, the Movement adopted a strong visual identity, an anthem, and a choreography, symbols of hope widely broadcast on community radio and digital platforms. A simple message echoed everywhere: “This is the Girls’ Movement.”Numbers That SpeakBehind every number lies a story, a face, a dream. In less than a year, the Girls’ Movement mobilized 7,018 children, including 5,632 girls, to make their voices heard across Cameroon’s ten regions. It distributed 729 sanitary kits, organized 38 community consultations, and launched a national petition calling for immediate action. Through the “Cyber Queen” podcast, thousands of young people were sensitized to the dangers of cyberbullying, while an environmental campaign brought together 150 girls to fight plastic pollution. These figures are not mere data, they embody a dynamic, a collective energy transforming girls’ realities into concrete actions and lasting hope.From Advocacy to Action: A Manifesto for Girls’ Rights At 18, Janelle is part of the Girls’ Taskforce responsible for drafting the Cameroon Girls’ Manifesto. For a full day, they debate, rewrite, and refine every word. “This isn’t a text for adults. It’s ours,” she explains.
Presented at the National Forum on Girls’ Rights, which gathered over 1,500 girls from all regions of Cameroon, the Manifesto marked a historic moment. It is accompanied by a national petition calling for concrete and immediate action. For the first time, girls’ priorities were brought directly before decision-makers, in a space designed for and with them.
Addressing participants at the Forum’s closing, the UNICEF Representative delivered a powerful and symbolic message:
“I hope each of you returns to your region, your community, your home, proud of these achievements. And that one day, you will tell your children and grandchildren: I was there. I was part of this movement that changed our lives, and yours.”
These words resonated as both a promise and a shared responsibility: to make the Girls’ Movement not a one-time event, but the starting point for lasting change for generations to come.
For Marie‑Thérèse Abena Ondoa, the Minister of Women’s Empowerment and the Family (MINPROFF), this Forum marks a decisive step: “This National Forum aims at the holistic promotion of girls’ rights to foster their full development. Designed for and with girls, the Movement aligns with Cameroon’s commitments under the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child.”Investing in Tomorrow’s Leaders In Yaoundé, Mireille, 21, takes part in the “Ma COTA” mentorship program. A determined student but often in doubt, she is paired with a woman leader. The meetings change her trajectory. “She didn’t tell me what to do. She showed me it was possible.”
Through this program, teenage girls are mentored by ministers, entrepreneurs, professionals, and activists. They build confidence, leadership, and the ability to envision their future. The Girls’ Movement doesn’t just listen to girls, it invests in them.A Collective Commitment for Lasting ChangeThe Girls’ Movement relies on a multisectoral mobilization bringing together key ministries, UN agencies, civil society organizations, community leaders, the private sector, and the media. This synergy has made girls’ rights a visible national priority.
Today, the Movement goes beyond a campaign. It stands as a sustainable national platform, set to inform the development of a National Agenda for Girls’ Rights, aligned with Cameroon’s priorities and driven by the continued engagement of girls themselves.“Our Future Starts Now” Aïssatou, Janelle, Mireille. Different names, unique stories, but one shared conviction: their future deserves to be built with them, not for them. Across Cameroon, thousands of girls are now speaking out, occupying public spaces, and reminding us of a fundamental truth: When girls lead, change becomes possible.
By listening to them, supporting them, and acting alongside them, UNICEF and its partners reaffirm an essential certainty: when girls lead, communities progress, and nations transform.
“Too often, decisions that affect girls’ lives are made without them,” reminds Nadine Perrault the UNICEF Representative in Cameroon. “The Girls’ Movement is based on a simple but powerful principle: girls are not just beneficiaries; they are legitimate agents of change.”
This vision gave birth to Girls’ Vision for the Future – Girls’ Movement, an initiative led by UNICEF, the Government of Cameroon, and numerous partners, to make girls key actors of change and essential voices in public policies that concern them.A Nationwide Mobilization Led by Girls Themselves In 2025, a national caravan traveled across Cameroon’s ten regions, meeting girls in urban, rural, remote, and crisis-affected areas. More than 5,600 girls, from all walks of life, internally displaced, refugees, girls with disabilities, adolescents in and out of school,spoke up in safe spaces. They shared their realities, expressed their priorities, and voiced their dreams.
Aïcha recalls: “That day, we weren’t judged. We were listened to.”
To strengthen unity and belonging, the Movement adopted a strong visual identity, an anthem, and a choreography, symbols of hope widely broadcast on community radio and digital platforms. A simple message echoed everywhere: “This is the Girls’ Movement.”Numbers That SpeakBehind every number lies a story, a face, a dream. In less than a year, the Girls’ Movement mobilized 7,018 children, including 5,632 girls, to make their voices heard across Cameroon’s ten regions. It distributed 729 sanitary kits, organized 38 community consultations, and launched a national petition calling for immediate action. Through the “Cyber Queen” podcast, thousands of young people were sensitized to the dangers of cyberbullying, while an environmental campaign brought together 150 girls to fight plastic pollution. These figures are not mere data, they embody a dynamic, a collective energy transforming girls’ realities into concrete actions and lasting hope.From Advocacy to Action: A Manifesto for Girls’ Rights At 18, Janelle is part of the Girls’ Taskforce responsible for drafting the Cameroon Girls’ Manifesto. For a full day, they debate, rewrite, and refine every word. “This isn’t a text for adults. It’s ours,” she explains.
Presented at the National Forum on Girls’ Rights, which gathered over 1,500 girls from all regions of Cameroon, the Manifesto marked a historic moment. It is accompanied by a national petition calling for concrete and immediate action. For the first time, girls’ priorities were brought directly before decision-makers, in a space designed for and with them.
Addressing participants at the Forum’s closing, the UNICEF Representative delivered a powerful and symbolic message:
“I hope each of you returns to your region, your community, your home, proud of these achievements. And that one day, you will tell your children and grandchildren: I was there. I was part of this movement that changed our lives, and yours.”
These words resonated as both a promise and a shared responsibility: to make the Girls’ Movement not a one-time event, but the starting point for lasting change for generations to come.
For Marie‑Thérèse Abena Ondoa, the Minister of Women’s Empowerment and the Family (MINPROFF), this Forum marks a decisive step: “This National Forum aims at the holistic promotion of girls’ rights to foster their full development. Designed for and with girls, the Movement aligns with Cameroon’s commitments under the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child.”Investing in Tomorrow’s Leaders In Yaoundé, Mireille, 21, takes part in the “Ma COTA” mentorship program. A determined student but often in doubt, she is paired with a woman leader. The meetings change her trajectory. “She didn’t tell me what to do. She showed me it was possible.”
Through this program, teenage girls are mentored by ministers, entrepreneurs, professionals, and activists. They build confidence, leadership, and the ability to envision their future. The Girls’ Movement doesn’t just listen to girls, it invests in them.A Collective Commitment for Lasting ChangeThe Girls’ Movement relies on a multisectoral mobilization bringing together key ministries, UN agencies, civil society organizations, community leaders, the private sector, and the media. This synergy has made girls’ rights a visible national priority.
Today, the Movement goes beyond a campaign. It stands as a sustainable national platform, set to inform the development of a National Agenda for Girls’ Rights, aligned with Cameroon’s priorities and driven by the continued engagement of girls themselves.“Our Future Starts Now” Aïssatou, Janelle, Mireille. Different names, unique stories, but one shared conviction: their future deserves to be built with them, not for them. Across Cameroon, thousands of girls are now speaking out, occupying public spaces, and reminding us of a fundamental truth: When girls lead, change becomes possible.
By listening to them, supporting them, and acting alongside them, UNICEF and its partners reaffirm an essential certainty: when girls lead, communities progress, and nations transform.
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Story
27 February 2026
Cameroon and the United Nations: Building the Next Cooperation Framework Together
In November 2025, Yaoundé became the stage for an important moment in Cameroon’s journey toward sustainable development. For four days, from 11 to 14 November, government officials, United Nations representatives, technical experts, and partners gathered to co design the future: the UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (2027–2031).This was not just another workshop. It was the culmination of months of strategic dialogue between the Resident Coordinator’s Office and the Ministry of Economy, Planning and Regional Development (MINEPAT). The shared objective was clear: the new Cooperation Framework must be transformative, results-oriented, and fully aligned with Cameroon’s National Development Strategy 2020–2030 (SND30), the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and the broader UN reform agenda.Together, they agreed that the new framework must be more than a list of activities—it must be a transformative instrument, aligned with Cameroon’s National Development Strategy 2020–2030 (SND30) and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).A Workshop of Purpose and Preparation The atmosphere was one of focus and collaboration. Thanks to careful robust preparatory work—including methodological tools, templates, analytical reviews, and cross analysis of key documents evaluation findings—the participants were able to focus could concentrate on substance rather than process. Discussions were guided by core principles: Guided by principles of human rights, gender equality, leaving no one behind, and the Humanitarian–Development–Peace Nexus humanitarian development peace nexus, the discussions flowed with clarity and purpose and Results-based management. The emphasis was placed on coherence, joint ownership, and measurable impact.Facing the RealitiesThe workshop addressed structural challenges candidly, including The workshop did not shy away from hard truths. Presentations highlighted persistent challenges:•Slow industrialization and limited job creation, especially for youth.•Gaps between education and labor market needs.•Weak accountability and coordination in governance. The evaluation of the 2022–2026 Cooperation Framework highlighted important lessons: while progress was achieved, coherence, joint programming, and accountability mechanisms required strengthening.The conclusion was clear—this new cycle must be different Lessons from the evaluation of the 2022–2026 Cooperation Framework were also candid: while progress was made, coherence and joint ownership needed strengthening. The message was clear—this time, the framework must be built differently. Defining the Strategic PrioritiesBy the end of the workshop, a shared vision had emerged. Three strategic priorities were validated as the pillars of the new framework:1.Human Capital, Social Inclusion, and Community Resilience – ensuring equitable access to health, education, and social protection.2.Economic Transformation, Food Systems, Decent Jobs, Climate and Clean Energy – driving competitiveness, diversification, and a green transition that creates opportunities for youth and women.3.Governance, Peace, Stability, and Development Leadership – strengthening transparency, accountability, and integrated approaches to peace and development. Each priority was anchored in a Theory of Change and linked to a forthcoming Result Framework, ensuring clarity on expected results, indicators, baselines, and accountability mechanisms.4. Particular attention was given to vulnerable groups—youth, women, persons with disabilities, refugees, and internally displaced persons—ensuring their centrality in programming. Each priority was anchored in a Theory of Change, mapping challenges to expected results, and identifying vulnerable groups—youth, women, persons with disabilities, internally displaced people—as central beneficiaries.Looking Ahead As the workshop closed, there was a sense of convergence. Government and UN representatives stood united in their commitment to finalize the framework, develop a robust performance measurement system, and translate the theories of change into Joint Work Plans that will deliver tangible results on the ground.The workshop demonstrated that when Government, the UN, and partners work together with clarity and ambition, transformation becomes achievable.The UN Cooperation Framework 2027–2031 will be more than a plan. It will be a promise: to build resilience, foster inclusion, and ensure that no one is left behind on Cameroon’s journey toward emergence.
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13 January 2026
UNICEF Concludes Its “My Name” Program by Awarding Prizes to Top Municipalities
Oumarou Sanda, Mayor of Garoua 2, proudly raised the national citizenship champion trophy high above his head, arms stretched toward the sky, as the crowd erupted in applause. Standing beside him, smiling, were Ms. Nadine Perrault, UNICEF Representative in Cameroon, and Mr. Georges Elanga Obam, Minister of Decentralization and Local Development.As a reward for this achievement, Mr. Sanda received a check for 15 million CFA francs and a large symbolic key. This victory will enable the Northern Region to benefit from a multifunctional truck dedicated to facilitating birth registration. This initiative aligns with UNICEF’s vision to ensure that no child is deprived of a legal identity.In total, three categories were awarded:Category 1: Best overall performanceCategory 2: Top three per regionCategory 3: Most promising practicesMunicipal councils of Koza (Far North), Bikok (Center), Nitoukou (Center), Batouri (East), and Limbe 1 (Southwest) received checks ranging from 10 to 14 million CFA francs, as well as tricycles and digital equipment, based on their scores:Garoua 2: 86.2/120 – 15 million CFAKoza: 85.2 points – 14 million CFABikok: 84.3 points – 13 million CFANitoukou: 78.1 points – 12 million CFABatouri: 76.4 points – 12 million CFALimbe 1: 75.7 points – 10 million CFAThese prizes aim to support improvements in birth registration systems within the winning municipalities.UNICEF also recognized the exceptional commitment of certain individuals during the competition. Jean Abaté Edi’i, Governor of the Northern Region, was particularly honored for sponsoring a special birth registration initiative. Alexandre Marie Yomo, Director General of the National Civil Status Bureau (BUNEC), was also rewarded for the dedication of his teams in the field.Remarkable Results on the GroundIn her speech, Nadine Perrault, UNICEF Representative in Cameroon, praised the engagement of nearly all municipalities and the impressive results achieved:176 municipalities established civil registration services in health centers.126 municipalities enrolled pupils without birth certificates in primary schools.82 municipalities developed a budgeted action plan.88 municipalities created civil status consultation platforms.83 municipalities adopted innovative practices to improve birth registration.These advances reflect a collective will to strengthen birth registration at the local level and promote interoperability between health, education, and civil status sectors. The UNICEF Representative expressed deep gratitude to all technical and financial partners involved:
“The progress achieved is a source of hope. Thanks to this momentum, local civil registration systems have been strengthened, innovations introduced, and services made more accessible to the most vulnerable populations. These successes are the result of exceptional local leadership, embodied by the mayors—the true agents of change we honor today.”
— Nadine Perrault, UNICEF Representative in CameroonSpecial Awards for Citizenship ChampionsThe 40 top-ranked municipalities received various equipment, including mobile service tricycles, IT equipment, and certificates of recognition.The Minister of Decentralization and Local Development, a key player in the success of the “My Name” campaign, emphasized that the most recent civil status law was among the achievements stemming from this initiative. He reiterated the government’s commitment to continue improving the birth registration system.A National Commitment to Legal IdentityThis competition follows the signing of the Mayors’ Charter during the first Mayors’ Forum on Birth Registration, held on April 27, 2024. At that forum, mayors pledged to make birth registration a local priority. The “My Name” contest is a joint initiative of UNICEF, the Cameroonian government, particularly MINDDEVEL and BUNEC, and decentralized local authorities. In total, 98% of municipalities, or 367 out of 374, participated in the contest, guided by seven key indicators. These included establishing civil registration offices in health facilities, developing budgeted civil status action plans, providing feedback on statistical data, ensuring interoperability of information systems, and mobilizing communities and schools.Rewards Based on EffortA jury composed of representatives from government bodies, including MINDDEVEL, BUNEC, and MINEDUB, as well as technical and financial partners such as FEICOM, the World Bank, GIZ, NASLA, INS, and UNICEF evaluated the municipalities’ performance.A Step Toward Inclusive CitizenshipThe “My Name” challenge paves the way for a more robust, inclusive, and interconnected civil registration system. It represents a significant step toward addressing the invisibility of children without legal identity and supports the legal recognition of every child in Cameroon. By laying the foundation for a more inclusive civil registration system, “My Name” directly contributes to UNICEF’s KRC 7, which aims to guarantee legal identity for every child, and aligns with SDG 16.9, promoting universal legal identity by 2030.“What we have accomplished together goes far beyond a competition: it is a national movement to ensure that every child is visible, recognized, and protected. Thanks to this momentum, public services have moved closer to the most vulnerable families, and the impact is already tangible on the ground.”
— Nadine Perrault, UNICEF Representative in Cameroon
“The progress achieved is a source of hope. Thanks to this momentum, local civil registration systems have been strengthened, innovations introduced, and services made more accessible to the most vulnerable populations. These successes are the result of exceptional local leadership, embodied by the mayors—the true agents of change we honor today.”
— Nadine Perrault, UNICEF Representative in CameroonSpecial Awards for Citizenship ChampionsThe 40 top-ranked municipalities received various equipment, including mobile service tricycles, IT equipment, and certificates of recognition.The Minister of Decentralization and Local Development, a key player in the success of the “My Name” campaign, emphasized that the most recent civil status law was among the achievements stemming from this initiative. He reiterated the government’s commitment to continue improving the birth registration system.A National Commitment to Legal IdentityThis competition follows the signing of the Mayors’ Charter during the first Mayors’ Forum on Birth Registration, held on April 27, 2024. At that forum, mayors pledged to make birth registration a local priority. The “My Name” contest is a joint initiative of UNICEF, the Cameroonian government, particularly MINDDEVEL and BUNEC, and decentralized local authorities. In total, 98% of municipalities, or 367 out of 374, participated in the contest, guided by seven key indicators. These included establishing civil registration offices in health facilities, developing budgeted civil status action plans, providing feedback on statistical data, ensuring interoperability of information systems, and mobilizing communities and schools.Rewards Based on EffortA jury composed of representatives from government bodies, including MINDDEVEL, BUNEC, and MINEDUB, as well as technical and financial partners such as FEICOM, the World Bank, GIZ, NASLA, INS, and UNICEF evaluated the municipalities’ performance.A Step Toward Inclusive CitizenshipThe “My Name” challenge paves the way for a more robust, inclusive, and interconnected civil registration system. It represents a significant step toward addressing the invisibility of children without legal identity and supports the legal recognition of every child in Cameroon. By laying the foundation for a more inclusive civil registration system, “My Name” directly contributes to UNICEF’s KRC 7, which aims to guarantee legal identity for every child, and aligns with SDG 16.9, promoting universal legal identity by 2030.“What we have accomplished together goes far beyond a competition: it is a national movement to ensure that every child is visible, recognized, and protected. Thanks to this momentum, public services have moved closer to the most vulnerable families, and the impact is already tangible on the ground.”
— Nadine Perrault, UNICEF Representative in Cameroon
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14 January 2026
Cameroon and UNHCR: Building Durable Solutions Through Partnership, Solidarity and Innovation
As humanitarian funding pressures intensify globally, Cameroon is emerging as a compelling example of how strong national leadership, strategic partnerships, and UN system-wide collaboration can move refugee protection beyond emergency response to durable and development-oriented solutions.Today, Cameroon hosts over two million forcibly displaced people, including more than 407,000 refugees mainly from the Central African Republic (CAR) and Nigeria, in addition to over a million internally displaced persons and returnees. In a region often defined by instability, cross‑border movements, and sustained displacement pressures, this approach reflects how responsibility‑sharing between the Government and its international partners aligns national policies with global humanitarian and development frameworks.At the center of this approach is UNHCR’s community-centered model, anchored in Cameroon’s National Development Strategy 2030 (SND30). Rather than creating parallel systems, the strategy focuses on including refugees into national plans and programmes—strengthening social cohesion, resilience, and sustainable self-reliance. A clear and powerful example of this commitment was recently recognized through the awarding of the UNHCR Global Nansen Refugee Award to Chief Azia of Gado, whose leadership has exemplified solidarity and compassion toward refugees in the East Region.Education as a Foundation for Inclusion One of the most visible outcomes of this inclusive approach is in education. In close collaboration with the Government of Cameroon and Education Cannot Wait, UNICEF, UNESCO and WFP, UNHCR has supported the enrollment of more than 47,000 refugee children in formal education, with an additional 6,400 enrolled in non-formal learning programmes.By supporting public schools with learning materials, classrooms, and WASH facilities, these interventions benefit both refugee and host community children. Education has thus become a powerful tool not only for learning, but for peaceful coexistence and community cohesion in refugee-hosting areas.Integrated Healthcare That Saves LivesHealthcare inclusion is another pillar of Cameroon’s model. Working closely with the Ministry of Health and UN partners, UNHCR has supported the inclusion of more than 99,000 refugees into the national health system, enabling access to subsidized care for malaria, maternal health, HIV, and other priority conditions.This collaboration proved critical during the last cholera outbreak in Minawao refugee camp, where a coordinated response led to the vaccination of 80,980 refugees and host community members, reaching an impressive 98.54% coverage rate. The response highlighted the effectiveness of government-led systems supported by UN coordination.Food Security and Nutrition: A Strong UN Partnership with WFP Food security and nutrition remain among the most urgent needs for refugees and displaced populations in Cameroon—particularly in the Far North and Eastern regions. In this context, deepened collaboration between UNHCR and the World Food Programme (WFP) has been critical.Together, UNHCR and WFP have responded to the food and nutritional needs of Nigerian refugees and displaced populations in the Far North, as well as Central African refugees in Cameroon’s eastern façade. Through coordinated food assistance, nutrition screening, and targeted support for vulnerable groups, the partnership has helped stabilize food consumption and reduce malnutrition risks.Complementing this effort, UNHCR has worked with UNICEF, WFP, and partners to improve the nutritional status of 4,522 children under five and 2,683 pregnant and lactating women—an investment with long-term implications for child survival and development.During the 2024 floods, which affected more than 21,000 out-of-camp refugees, a coordinated UN response—supported by CERF funding — enabled the timely delivery of critical nutritional assistance, including Enov’mum and Nutributter, reinforcing the importance of joint preparedness and response mechanisms.Localizing the SDGs Through Urban Planning and Inclusion: Joint Action with UN‑Habitat Moving beyond humanitarian assistance toward sustainable, development‑oriented solutions, UNHCR is working closely with UN‑Habitat, the Government of Cameroon, and local authorities under a Joint SDG Programme to strengthen inclusive urban planning in the Far North. Implemented between December 2024 and December 2025, the initiative focuses on the municipalities of Mokolo and Fotokol, where rapid urbanization, climate pressures, and forced displacement have strained basic services and infrastructure.Under the joint programme, UN‑Habitat leads efforts to integrate sustainable human settlements and SDG 11 principles into municipal spatial planning, while UNHCR strengthens the participation and capacities of refugees, internally displaced persons, women, youth, and persons with disabilities within local decision‑making structures. Through coordinated planning, investment‑ready local development projects are being identified in areas such as clean energy access, waste management, digital connectivity, low‑carbon construction, and biodiversity preservation, benefiting an estimated 562,000 people.Identity, Protection and Access to Services Effective protection depends on legal identity. In partnership with the Government of Cameroon, UNHCR has implemented a landmark biometric registration initiative—the first of its kind in Central Africa. Over 33,000 refugees have been registered, with nearly 21,000 biometric ID cards already issued by the Directorate General for National Security.While public debate has emerged around these IDs, UNHCR emphasizes their strictly humanitarian purpose: protecting rights, facilitating access to services, and enabling freedom of movement—all essential for self-reliance.Land, Agriculture and Self-RelianceWith legal documentation in place, refugees are increasingly able to pursue livelihoods. In collaboration with local authorities, more than 650 hectares of land have been allocated for refugee farming in the Far North and East regions, benefiting over 1,000 refugees.Through partnerships with FAO and the ILO, refugees—particularly women‑led enterprises—are accessing vocational training in agriculture and agro‑processing, supporting decent work, food security, and local economic inclusion.These initiatives, supported by UNHCR and partners, are now being positioned for private sector engagement, linking humanitarian action with local economic development and food security.Sustaining Progress Amid Funding Constraints While significant advances abound, Cameroon’s refugee response faces growing challenges due to declining global humanitarian funding. Among the most urgent initiatives at risk is the voluntary repatriation of Central African and Nigerian refugees, a cornerstone of sustainable and dignified solutions.“Cameroon stands out for its steadfast commitment to protection and inclusion,” says Yvette Muhimpundu, UNHCR Representative in Cameroon. “But sustaining progress and expanding impact will depend on renewed international solidarity and shared responsibility.”With renewed momentum from the Global Refugee Forum held in Geneva in December 2025, Cameroon’s experience demonstrates that when governments, UN agencies, donors, civil society, and communities work together, refugee responses can evolve from crisis management to long-term recovery and development.UNHCR’s work in Cameroon is not only about protecting people forced to flee—it is about building systems, strengthening communities, and ensuring that no one is left behind.
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25 March 2026
Hadja: Stitching a New Life, One Point at a Time
She fled armed group attacks to protect her children. Today, in Meri, Hadja is learning to sew and reclaim her place in the community. Her journey illustrates how, thanks to the support of the European Union and the commitment of UNICEF and its partners, vocational training becomes a path to resilience and hope.For a long time, Hadja stayed at home in Meri. Days passed without activity, weighed down by a past marked by armed group attacks. She had fled with her children, leaving her hometown behind to seek refuge far from violence. “She doesn’t want war anymore,” she says simply. She wants peace, for herself, for her children, and for the future.Today, Hadja has returned to learning. For several weeks now, she has been attending a sewing and dressmaking course at the Multifunctional Youth Promotion Center (CMPJ) in Meri. In this lively workshop, where the steady hum of sewing machines fills the air, she learns to handle fabric, trace, cut, and assemble. New gestures, carrying a promise: to regain an occupation, dignity, and a place within the community.This training is part of a reintegration and social cohesion project funded by the European Union and implemented by UNICEF and IOM, in partnership with local actors. The project supports the center’s operations by strengthening its capacity, notably through the provision of machines and materials, enabling it to welcome and train more women. “Before, we had few machines. Today, this support has really boosted the center’s ability to train and integrate young people and women,” explains a CMPJ official. In the sewing workshop, Hadja is part of a group of women from different backgrounds, some formerly associated with armed groups, others displaced by violence. They come every day, some in the morning, others in the afternoon, sharing machines and learning together. What motivated Hadja to enroll was not just the trade, but the idea of belonging to a group. “We want to have a team that will support us,” she says. Working together helps her break isolation and rebuild trust.The training, which will continue until March, includes the awarding of certificates and, where possible, material support to promote women’s autonomy after the program. The goal is clear: to enable them to earn an income, support their families, and become firmly rooted in the community. “Training, having a trade, that’s the dream of many of these women,” says the center’s manager. “Giving someone the ability to get back on their feet in life, that’s a source of pride.”In Meri, challenges remain numerous. But enthusiasm is strong. Women are diligent, motivated, and supported by their families. Sewing becomes a discreet yet powerful lever: a way to transform time, material, and gradually, life trajectories.In a region scarred by years of conflict, the European Union’s investment in vocational training and women’s empowerment helps strengthen community resilience and prevent the recurrence of violence. By offering practical skills and a structured environment, the project helps women become actors in shaping their own future.For Hadja, learning to sew is more than a trade. It’s a way to turn the page without tearing it, to rebuild without forgetting, and to imagine a future where her children grow up far from war.In Meri, thanks to the support of the European Union and the commitment of UNICEF, IOM, and their partners, women like Hadja are no longer just survivors. They are becoming artisans of peace, patiently stitching together the fragile threads of coexistence and hope.
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25 March 2026
In Méri, Shared Dialogue Rebuilds Peace
In Cameroon’s Far North, where insecurity has displaced thousands of families, reconciliation begins with dialogue. In Méri, thanks to a project supported by the European Union and implemented by UNICEF, IOM, and partners, conversation opens the path to lasting peace.In a region where insecurity has displaced more than 453,000 people, including 385,000 children, peace begins with dialogue. In Méri, within a safe space supported by the project “Supporting the reintegration and reconciliation of former associates of non-state armed groups (NSAGs) to strengthen social cohesion for peace and sustainable development in Cameroon’s Far North”, funded by the European Union, women, men, and youth gather weekly with community leaders and former associates. In a context marked by poverty (74.3%), scarce resources, and fragile coexistence with more than 7,000 former associates, dialogue becomes a tangible tool for reconciliation.Circles form every week. Women, men, young girls, young boys, community leaders, and former associates sit together. For many, this is an unprecedented gesture. “Just agreeing to meet together is already an impact,” says Abdou, SBC Project Manager at ALDEPA, a local implementing partner. In a region scarred by years of violence and mistrust, these dialogues create a rare space, one where everyone can speak, listen, and understand each other. Words shared in the circle reveal deep wounds: language barriers, stigma, pressure on farmland, feelings of exclusion, the roots of social fracture emerge without filter. “They didn’t talk to each other. Everyone stayed in their corner,” Abdou recalls. Naming the problems becomes the first step toward reconciliation. Together, participants analyze causes, measure consequences on coexistence, and propose shared solutions.Gradually, things change. Youth suggest joint sports and cultural activities. Others commit to learning each other’s language to break mistrust. Community actions, such as clean-up campaigns or intergenerational meetings, become opportunities to work side by side. “Today, we greet each other. We talk. We go out together to carry on our activities,” participants share. These simple gestures, once unthinkable, are the first signs of peace taking root. The meetings are not isolated. Every week, targeted discussions are held with different groups: youth, women, men, adolescents. The goal is clear: maintain open communication, prevent tensions, and strengthen the sense of shared belonging. “Before, people saw each other as strangers. Today, they understand the importance of having the other by their side,” a community leader proudly testifies. Beyond words, community dialogue lays the foundation for other transformations: economic empowerment, protection, and prevention of re-recruitment. “Without peace, nothing can really work,” he reminds.This dynamic is part of a broader approach to community stabilization and reintegration, led by UNICEF and IOM with local NGOs such as ALDEPA and ARDHU in several localities of the Far North (Mora, Mémé, Kolofata, Gance, Tolkomari, Hamchide, Koza, Mayo Moskota, Fotokol, Makary, Méri). The objective: strengthen community acceptance, prevent violence, and create an environment conducive to sustainable reintegration. These dialogue spaces also play a key role in child protection in a region where 239 grave violations against 173 children were confirmed in 2023, a 53% increase compared to 2022. They help identify vulnerabilities, strengthen community protection mechanisms, and prepare communities to welcome children and youth affected by conflict, including nearly 4,000 former associates (1,340 of them children) returned through informal channels outside the official DDR process.The reality on the ground underscores the scale of the challenge: about 3,000 people are still in rehabilitation at the Méri center, and returns continue. Here, peace does not take the form of a monument or a written agreement. It is seen in a shared greeting, a football match, a learned language, a word finally heard. And thanks to the commitment of the European Union and its partners, every dialogue circle becomes a promise: a promise of a future where host communities and former associates move forward together, united by respect, dignity, and the hope of lasting peace.
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25 March 2026
Rebuilding the Basics: Restored Infrastructure Changing Lives in Cameroon’s Far North, North-West and South-West Regions
Cameroon’s crisis-affected regions are shaped by different realities, but they share a common experience of years of disruption that has weakened essential services and tested community resilience. In the Far North, insecurity linked to violent extremism, climate shocks, and displacement has placed immense strain on already fragile health systems. In the North-West and South-West regions, a prolonged sociopolitical crisis has disrupted public services, damaged infrastructure, and interrupted access to education, water, and healthcare.Throughout 2025, UNDP Cameroon’s work across these regions has focused on restoring the basics people rely on most, including health centres, water systems, schools, community roads, public spaces, and other shared social and economic infrastructure. This approach has recognized that recovery and stability begin with everyday needs. In the Far North, access to healthcare has remained one of the most urgent challenges. Many health facilities have been damaged, understaffed, or overwhelmed by growing numbers of displaced families, leaving pregnant women and young children particularly vulnerable. With the support of the UNDP Regional Stabilization Facility (RSF), the rehabilitation of health centres and maternity units has helped bring essential care closer to communities that have gone too long without reliable services.At the Logone Birni District Medical Centre, the impact has been immediate. “From just 10 women initially, we now have over 40 pregnant women seeking care here,” says Nurse Abali. “The water here helps us a lot, not only for the maternity ward but for the whole hospital. You can’t imagine the number of lives you have saved.” For families who had lost confidence in local services, functioning health centres has restored trust and offered reassurance that care would be available when it mattered most.In the South-West, intervention efforts in 2025 have been closely tied to safe water after years of disruption forced many communities to rely on unsafe and distant sources. In Bonadikombo, the daily search for water shaped household routines, health conditions, and economic activity.“We suffered a lot,” recalls Ejobo Eric Ewumbue, Quarter Head of Bonadikombo. “Our wives and daughters would leave the house before dawn just to find water. The lack of clean water was one of our biggest challenges.” With the support of the UNDP Recovery Programme under the Presidential Plan for Reconstruction and Development(PPRD), the rehabilitation of water systems, including solar-powered boreholes, has brought lasting relief. “Now, water is just a few steps away,” says Neh Tabukong, a mother of five. “My children no longer suffer from water-related diseases, and I do not have to spend hours walking to get water. I even have time to run my small business.” Alongside water infrastructure, restored health centres, schools, and public spaces have helped communities regain a sense of normalcy after years of uncertainty. In the North-West, the crisis has left its deepest mark on education. Schools were closed, damaged, or abandoned, leaving thousands of children without safe learning spaces. In Old Town Bamenda, Islamic Nursery and Primary School survived more on determination than on infrastructure after parts of it were set on fire in 2018.“The classrooms were broken, benches dilapidated, and teaching was a daily struggle,” recalls School Manager Mallam Mutari Amisu. “Despite these hardships, parents trusted the school, teachers pushed on, and children showed up every morning. It was tough, but we never gave up.”Today, the school tells a different story. Reconstructed classrooms, a computer lab, improved sanitation facilities, a secure perimeter fence, and inclusive access features have restored safety and dignity to the learning environment. “Our classrooms are now spacious and well ventilated,” says Head Teacher Mrs. Mekwatc Vivian. “Teaching is easier, lessons are more engaging, and enrollment has increased because parents see this as a proper learning environment again.” Together, these efforts reflect UNDP Cameroon’s integrated approach to crisis response, supporting stabilization in the Far North, advancing recovery and development in the North-West and South-West, and complementing wider programmes across the country that strengthen resilience, livelihoods, and inclusive development.
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25 March 2026
The U-Reporters are leading the response against polio in the North and Far North of Cameroon
Immediately after the campaign briefing, the U-Reporters spread out across public spaces, streets and households to relay prevention messages, combat rumours and encourage parents to have their children vaccinated against polio. Equipped with megaphones, visual aids and, above all, contagious energy, they knocked on doors and led educational discussions."We are the voice of children and young people. If we don't get involved, who will? Polio can be prevented, and it starts with us," says Fadimatou, a committed U-Reporter from Garoua.For many, this participation goes beyond simple volunteering. It represents a civic duty and a commitment by young people to make their voices heard and participate in community actions.When I see a mother hesitating and then, after discussion, agreeing to have her child vaccinated, I tell myself that our presence really makes a difference," says Abraham, U Reporter Maroua.In some communities, misinformation persists. U-Reporters have played a key role in debunking myths about the vaccine by showing videos of people affected by polio."We sometimes hear that vaccines cause infertility or make people ill. We patiently explain that these rumours are false. Vaccination protects and saves lives," explains Nasser, U Reporter Mokolo. Thanks to their proximity to the community and their mastery of social media, they also disseminated awareness messages online, thereby reaching a wider audience."My social media page received over 10,000 views in 24 hours on the posts I shared as part of this polio campaign. I am convinced that this has helped save lives," says Rodrigues U Reporter Lagdo.Beyond vaccination, this campaign strengthened the leadership skills of the young participants. Through public speaking and teamwork, the U-Reporters developed skills in social mobilisation in mass campaigns."Participating in this campaign has taught me that we young people are ready and willing to serve our community. We can take action now," emphasises Bintou, U Reporter Kolofata.Polio remains a threat in several regions of the country, but every child vaccinated brings communities closer to its definitive eradication. Thanks to the commitment of young people alongside partners, hope remains strong. When young people mobilise, no cause is too great. From the North to the Far North, in more than twenty villages (Garoua, Gachiga, Pitoa, Lagdo, Moutourwa, Yagoua, Kaikai, Maga, Bogo, Maroua, Mokolo, Koza, Mozogo, Meri, Meme, Kolofata, Kousseri and Logone Birni), U Reporters have remained dynamic and committed to protecting every life.
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25 March 2026
Dignity in menstruation: a shared responsibility, not a women and girl's issue
Yet across many communities in Cameroon’s Northwest and Southwest regions, menstruation remains wrapped in silence, mysticism, and shame. A natural biological process one that signals health and the continuation of life has instead become a barrier to girls’ education, safety, and opportunity. It becomes an invisible glass wall, slowing the progress of women and girls and denying them the right to feel safe, understood, supported, and valued.In too many schools, the systems that enable menstrual hygiene management simply do not exist. Water is scarce. Sanitary materials are unavailable. Safe and private spaces are absent. When menstruation comes, many girls stay home missing days of lessons, confidence, and fragments of childhood along the way.In the crisis-affected Northwest and Southwest regions of Cameroon, where the Anglophone conflict has already disrupted education, girls lose an average of 36 school days each academic year due to mandatory ghost towns on Mondays. When menstruation is added to this reality, some girls miss 54 to 81 days of school every year. As local wisdom reminds us: “When one leg is injured, the journey becomes longer.”“Menstruation to me was something dirty that made me hide.”
— Angel, GBHS Kossala, Meme DivisionIn GBHS Kossala, students sat quietly, curious about what the “NGO people” had come to say. There was a familiar excitement in the room often, visitors bring food or supplies. But as sensitization and mentioned menstruation, the mood shifted. At the mere mention of the word, heads bowed. Giggles followed. Faces were covered. Unease filled the air. In a world overflowing with information, such myths may seem unbelievable. Yet in crisis-affected communities, survival often comes before learning. When the choice is food or menstrual pads, food will always win. Conversations about menstruation are postponed, silenced, or ignored even within homes. Girls are left to interpret natural bodily changes on their own, allowing myths, fear, and stigma to flourish.Inspired by global evidence and UNICEF-supported interventions, where dignity kits, local pad production, and menstrual education have helped keep girls in school we adopt an approach that blends play, art, and science to replace fear with familiarity.We begin by dismantling shame. The lead facilitator shouts, “Dignityyyyy!”
The children respond, “Menstruationnnn!”
They clap, laugh, and move repeating the chant until the word menstruation is no longer whispered, but joyfully shouted. In that moment, a taboo becomes normal. A door opens for learning. At GBHS Kossala as in many other schools girls receive dignity boxes equipped with menstrual education charts, disposable pads, panties, towels, and essential menstrual supplies. These boxes serve as emergency solutions, ensuring that no girl has to leave school because of her period. Girls can clean up, change safely, and remain in class with confidence.The “My First Period” handbook is also distributed, an age-appropriate learning material designed to help children understand menstruation with knowledge, care, and dignity.Through these efforts, UNICEF, working closely with its implementing partner Royalty World, is ensuring that every girl— including girls with disabilities— is sensitized, supported, and provided with the care and resources needed to manage menstruation with dignity. Our approach is inclusive by design, recognizing that girls with disabilities face compounded barriers and must not be left behind in menstrual health education and services. These life-changing interventions are made possible thanks to the generous support of the European Union Humanitarian Aid and the Government of Japan, whose commitment continues to protect the dignity, health, and education of girls in crisis-affected communities across Cameroon.We call on all counterparts government institutions, civil society actors, community leaders, educators, and private sector partners to join us in breaking the silence around menstruation. Invest in menstrual hygiene management. Create safe spaces in schools. Normalize conversations at home and in communities.Because when girls are supported to manage menstruation with dignity, they stay in school, they thrive, and our collective future becomes stronger.
— Angel, GBHS Kossala, Meme DivisionIn GBHS Kossala, students sat quietly, curious about what the “NGO people” had come to say. There was a familiar excitement in the room often, visitors bring food or supplies. But as sensitization and mentioned menstruation, the mood shifted. At the mere mention of the word, heads bowed. Giggles followed. Faces were covered. Unease filled the air. In a world overflowing with information, such myths may seem unbelievable. Yet in crisis-affected communities, survival often comes before learning. When the choice is food or menstrual pads, food will always win. Conversations about menstruation are postponed, silenced, or ignored even within homes. Girls are left to interpret natural bodily changes on their own, allowing myths, fear, and stigma to flourish.Inspired by global evidence and UNICEF-supported interventions, where dignity kits, local pad production, and menstrual education have helped keep girls in school we adopt an approach that blends play, art, and science to replace fear with familiarity.We begin by dismantling shame. The lead facilitator shouts, “Dignityyyyy!”
The children respond, “Menstruationnnn!”
They clap, laugh, and move repeating the chant until the word menstruation is no longer whispered, but joyfully shouted. In that moment, a taboo becomes normal. A door opens for learning. At GBHS Kossala as in many other schools girls receive dignity boxes equipped with menstrual education charts, disposable pads, panties, towels, and essential menstrual supplies. These boxes serve as emergency solutions, ensuring that no girl has to leave school because of her period. Girls can clean up, change safely, and remain in class with confidence.The “My First Period” handbook is also distributed, an age-appropriate learning material designed to help children understand menstruation with knowledge, care, and dignity.Through these efforts, UNICEF, working closely with its implementing partner Royalty World, is ensuring that every girl— including girls with disabilities— is sensitized, supported, and provided with the care and resources needed to manage menstruation with dignity. Our approach is inclusive by design, recognizing that girls with disabilities face compounded barriers and must not be left behind in menstrual health education and services. These life-changing interventions are made possible thanks to the generous support of the European Union Humanitarian Aid and the Government of Japan, whose commitment continues to protect the dignity, health, and education of girls in crisis-affected communities across Cameroon.We call on all counterparts government institutions, civil society actors, community leaders, educators, and private sector partners to join us in breaking the silence around menstruation. Invest in menstrual hygiene management. Create safe spaces in schools. Normalize conversations at home and in communities.Because when girls are supported to manage menstruation with dignity, they stay in school, they thrive, and our collective future becomes stronger.
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Press Release
26 March 2026
Cameroon launches CONVERGEFOOD Joint Programme to accelerate food systems transformation
Yaoundé, Cameroon – 25 March 2026. The Government of Cameroon, with support from the Joint SDG Fund and the UN Food Systems Coordination Hub, and in partnership with the United Nations system today officially launched the CONVERGEFOOD Joint Programme – an integrated initiative designed to strengthen agricultural value chains, expand access to finance, and connect smallholder farmers and agri-enterprises to reliable and inclusive markets, particularly in underserved and last-mile areas. Launched alongside the implementation phase of the EU-funded Scalable Success Model (SSM) project, this marks a significant step forward in accelerating food systems transformation in the country. Led by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MINADER), the initiative is coordinated by the Food Systems National Convenor, with strategic guidance from the United Nations Resident Coordinator's Office. It is jointly implemented by the World Food Programme (WFP), the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), and the United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF). Three other UN agencies have already expressed interest in joining phase II, starting next year 2027. That renders this programme a whole-of-UN package of support to the Government, making systemic approaches to food systems a reality and avoiding siloed programmes or single-ministry interventions. Cameroon continues to face significant food security challenges with 3.3 million people experiencing acute food insecurity, particularly in the Far North, North and East regions. In the most affected areas, up to 64 percent of households are severely food insecure, often exhausting their food stocks in less than one month. These pressures are compounded by climate shocks, such as recent droughts and floods affecting several regions, economic constraints, and limited access to markets and finance. The CONVERGEFOOD Joint Programme responds to this urgent context by translating national commitment into concrete action. It is the first of the bankable projects presented by the National Convenor that has received funds.“This joint programme demonstrates how the United Nations system delivers as one to support Cameroon’s national development priorities,” said Dr. Issa Sanogo, United Nations Resident Coordinator in Cameroon. “By bringing together expertise across agencies and strengthening partnerships with the government, financial institutions and development partners, we are catalyzing investments and accelerating progress toward resilient and inclusive food systems.” Government leadership remains central to this effort, highlighting that food systems transformation extends beyond a single ministry and requires coordinated action across sectors under a shared set of priorities, as outlined in Cameroon’s Convergence Action Blueprint.“The Government of Cameroon is committed to transforming its food systems to ensure food security, strengthen resilience, and create economic opportunities for our population, particularly women and youth in rural areas" said Gabriel Mbairobe, Minister of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MINADER). "Through the CONVERGEFOOD Joint Programme, we are accelerating the implementation of our national roadmap by aligning investments, de-risking the private sector financial sector, strengthening value chains for local markets and import substitution, and supporting smallholder producers across the country.” Anchored in Cameroon's Food Systems Transformation Roadmap and the Convergence Action Blueprint, the programme aligns priorities in food, climate, nutrition, and biodiversity, while also contributing to national climate commitments. It directly advances the three priorities identified in 2025 Convergence Action Blueprint: rice value chains, agroecological production of staples and livestock, and import substitution. “Food systems transformation is central to Cameroon’s climate action agenda,” said Pierre Hélé, Minister of the Ministry of Environment, Nature Protection and Sustainable Development (MINEPDED). “This initiative strengthens our capacity to promote climate-resilient agriculture and livestock, protect biodiversity and support sustainable livelihoods for communities. It fulfils Cameroon’s commitments and priorities included in the National Adaptation Plan, the Nationally-Determined Contribution and the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan presented in COP30.” The initiative will initially focus on the Far North, Adamawa, and East regions, targeting four priority value chains: rice, cassava, eggs, and dairy products. Through a coordinated and multisectoral approach, it will strengthen governance systems, improve food processing and safety infrastructure, promote climate-smart and agroecological production practices, and expand income and employment opportunities for smallholder farmers, women, and young people. A key feature of CONVERGEFOOD is its focus on mobilizing and de-risking private sector investment through a Blended Finance Mechanism, including a Guarantee Fund and a Disbursement Fund. This mechanism aims to increase financial flows to cooperatives and small and medium enterprises across the four priority value chains. This component is led by the United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF) during the second phase of the project, starting in 2027, with funding provided by the Government of Cameroon through a loan from the Islamic Development Bank under the Global Flagship Initiative for Food Security. During an early presentation of this project at the UN General Assembly side event in New York (September 2025), the UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed described CONVERGEFOOD as “UN reform in action, delivering as one and aligning mandates… more than coordination: it is a catalyst for action”. As a central pillar of international efforts to accelerate food systems transformation, the Global Flagship Initiative for Food Security supports countries in developing investment-ready pipelines, mobilising blended finance at scale, and aligning development partners around nationally led priorities. Cameroon represents the first country-level implementations of this approach, demonstrating how coordinated platforms can translate national strategies into large-scale, investable programmes. “The Global Flagship Initiative is about moving from strategy to investment and from commitment to implementation,” said Dr. Conrad Rein, Secretary-General of the Initiative. “Cameroon is demonstrating how country-led platforms can unlock coordinated financing and deliver tangible results on the ground. The next step is to replicate and scale this model across other countries, adapting it to national contexts while maintaining the same level of ambition and partnership.” Moreover, the European Union, through its support for the SSM project, also aligns their support to Cameroon food systems with the ConvergeFood initiative, contributing to strengthening institutional coordination and enabling the scaling up of food systems transformation efforts. “The European Union is proud to support Cameroon in advancing sustainable and inclusive food systems,” said Jean-Marc Châtaigner, Ambassador of the European Union Delegation to Cameroon. “Through the Scalable Success Model, we are helping to unlock investments, strengthen institutions, and support initiatives that deliver tangible benefits for rural communities.” The launch event brought together senior representatives from government ministries, development partners, financial institutions, cooperatives, and private sector actors, reinforcing a shared commitment to coordinated action and investment. The programme is expected to catalyze additional private investments for priority value chains, including mobilizing further financing to scale up support to cooperatives and agri-enterprises across the country. It aims to contribute to sustainable economic growth, improved food security, and increased resilience to climate shocks. ANNEX - Notes to Editors About the CONVERGEFOOD Joint Programme The CONVERGEFOOD Joint Programme is a government-led initiative supported by the Joint SDG Fund and UN Food Systems Coordination Hub, and implemented through a coordinated United Nations approach. It aims to accelerate the implementation of Cameroon's Food Systems Transformation Roadmap and the Convergence Action Blueprint by strengthening agricultural value chains, expanding access to finance, and promoting sustainable, inclusive, and climate-resilient food systems. The programme focuses on key value chains, including rice, cassava, eggs, and dairy products, with initial implementation in the Far North, Adamawa, and East regions. About the United Nations in Cameroon The United Nations system in Cameroon supports the Government in achieving sustainable development through coordinated action across its agencies, funds, and programmes, under the leadership of the United Nations Resident Coordinator. The UN works closely with national institutions and partners to advance food security, climate resilience, economic development, and social inclusion in line with the Sustainable Development Goals. About the World Food Programme (WFP) The World Food Programme is the world's largest humanitarian organization, providing life-saving food assistance in emergencies and supporting communities to build resilience and improve food security. In Cameroon, WFP assists vulnerable populations through emergency food aid, school feeding programmes, nutrition interventions, and initiatives that strengthen livelihoods and improve market access for smallholder farmers. About the Food Agriculture Organization (FAO) FAO leads international efforts to combat hunger and improve nutrition and food security. In Cameroon, FAO supports sustainable agricultural production, strengthens food systems, and promotes climate-smart practices. It collaborates with the government and partners to enhance rural livelihoods and ensure access to safe and nutritious food. About the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) UNEP is the leading global authority on the environment, supporting countries in advancing environmental sustainability and climate action. In Cameroon, UNEP collaborates with national partners to promote sustainable natural resource management, biodiversity conservation, and climate resilience, including initiatives that integrate environmental considerations into the transformation of food systems. About the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) UNIDO promotes inclusive and sustainable industrial development by supporting countries in building productive capacities, strengthening value chains, and enhancing competitiveness. In Cameroon, UNIDO contributes to the development of agro-industrial value chains, improves processing and quality standards, and supports innovation and market access for small and medium-sized enterprises. About the United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF) UNCDF mobilizes and catalyses an increase in capital flows for impactful investments in high-risk markets, especially in Least Developed Countries, Small Island Developing States and countries in special situations. By crowding in capital through the deployment of risk-absorbing financial instruments, mechanisms and structuring advisory, UNCDF contributes to job creation, sustained economic growth and equitable prosperity in nearly 70 countries. In partnership with UN entities and development partners, UNCDF operates with speed and agility to deliver scalable, blended finance solutions to drive systemic change and pave the way for commercial finance and scale up by development finance institutions and multilateral development banks. About the Joint SDG Fund The Joint SDG Fund is a United Nations inter-agency mechanism that supports countries in accelerating progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals through integrated and transformative approaches. It enables coordinated action across UN agencies and partners, mobilising resources to deliver impact at scale and support national development priorities. This joint programme is supported by the Joint SDG Fund in collaboration with the UN Food Systems Coordination Hub. All joint programmes of the Joint SDG Fund are led by UN Resident Coordinators and implemented by the agencies, funds, and programmes of the United Nations development system. With sincere appreciation for the contributions from the European Union and Governments of Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Monaco, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, the Republic of Korea, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland for a transformative movement towards achieving the SDGs by 2030. About the UN Food Systems Coordination Hub UN Food Systems Coordination Hub was established in 2022 and is hosted by FAO on behalf of the UN System and supported by the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the World Health Organization (WHO), the World Food Programme (WFP), the UN Development Programme (UNDP), and the United Nations Development Coordination Office (UNDCO). The Hub’s primary role is to support countries to develop further and implement their national food systems transformation pathways. To accelerate food systems transformations, the Hub takes an essential coordination role that brings together relevant UN agencies, coalitions, international financial institutions, the private sector and other supporting actors to galvanize food systems knowledge and expertise in support of countries’ action.About the European Union The European Union is a key partner in supporting sustainable development, climate action, and inclusive economic growth worldwide. In Cameroon, the EU supports initiatives that strengthen food systems, promote rural development, enhance resilience to climate change, and foster economic opportunities, including support for the Scalable Success Model project. About the Global Flagship Initiative for Food SecurityThe Global Flagship Initiative for Food Security was launched on Agri-Food Systems Day at the UNCCD COP16 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on 5 December 2024. It emerged from a partnership between the Arab Coordination Group, including AGFUND, BADEA, IsDB, and the OPEC Fund, with a potential commitment of up to USD 10 billion by 2030. It represents a unified global effort to combat food insecurity and accelerate progress towards SDG2 by prioritizing cost-effective, scalable, science-driven solutions in IGAD countries and Sahel regions. It also aligns with global efforts to scale up sustainable development financing through public-private partnerships, concessional finance, and de-risking mechanisms. For more information please contact (email address: firstname.lastname@wfp.org): Jean Njita, National Information Officer, United Nations Information Centre / Yaoundé, Mob. +237 677-623-939Nyandoh Paho, Communications Officer, World Food Programme / Yaoundé, Mob. +237 671-001-067 Mr. Djaoudjaourou, Head of Communication Unit; Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development / Yaoundé, Mob. +237 696 984 014 / 222 22 64 62/ Email: sg.celcom@minader.cm
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Press Release
13 January 2026
Yaoundé Establishes Universities as Engines for Children’s Rights: A Historic International Conference
Under the high patronage of the Prime Minister, represented by the Minister of State and Minister of Higher Education, Mr. Jacques Fame Ndongo, Cameroon’s capital hosted the First International Conference on the Role of Universities in Promoting and Protecting Children’s Rights. The event was co-organized by UNICEF Cameroon, the Catholic University of Central Africa (UCAC), and partner public universities in Cameroon. This unprecedented gathering brought together more than 1,500 in-person participants and 3,000 online attendees, including ministers, rectors, international experts, religious and traditional leaders, as well as engaged young students.Far beyond an academic event, this conference marks a pivotal step in institutionalizing the role of universities as full-fledged actors within national and regional systems for promoting and protecting children’s rights.Universities: Beacons for Children’s RightsOver two days, conferences and workshops explored how African universities can become centers of excellence for children’s rights. Discussions focused on research, teaching, advocacy, and public policy, with a special emphasis on Africa’s cultural heritage, particularly the Manden Charter (1236), which already enshrined fundamental rights for children. “Africa did not wait for modern conventions to recognize children’s fundamental rights. Reconnecting academic research with our cultural heritage means building an authentically African vision of child protection,” emphasized Nadine Perrault, UNICEF Representative in Cameroon.This historical perspective reframed children’s rights not as an imported concept but as an extension of African value systems, fostering stronger social and institutional ownership.Concrete Advances for the ContinentThe conference led to several major outcomes:Creation of the African Academic Network for Children’s Rights to promote inter-university cooperation and experience sharing.Commitment by nine African universities to establish Child Rights Centers, inspired by UCAC’s model.Adoption of the Yaoundé Declaration, affirming the central role of universities in promoting and protecting children’s rights.Launch of a bilingual Master’s program in Children’s Rights at UCAC, offered in a hybrid format and including international mobility opportunities.These results signal a clear shift from experimentation to scale, positioning universities as key drivers of public policy, elite training, and the production of social norms favorable to children’s rights.
“The university must be a beacon for society: a place where science meets ethics, where elite training goes hand in hand with a commitment to human dignity and children’s rights. The child is the father of man and the future of Africa,” stressed Rev. Fr. Prof. Thomas Bienvenu Tchoungui, Rector of UCAC.An Inclusive and Participatory DynamicChildren and adolescents were at the heart of the discussions, notably during a special dialogue marking World Children’s Day. Plenary sessions addressed key themes: digital innovation, local governance, health and inclusion, conflict-sensitive curricula, and cross-sector partnerships. Far from symbolic participation, these spaces allowed children and adolescents to express their expectations, priorities, and proposals, directly contributing to policy and program reflections.
For Ghassan Khalil, UNICEF Representative in Greece:
“Promoting children’s rights in Africa means combining our cultural heritage with international standards. This alliance is the key to sustainable public policies adapted to local realities. Universities are not just places of knowledge; they are engines of social transformation.”Engaged Student VoicesStudents expressed enthusiasm and commitment to this initiative:
“This conference opened my eyes to the role we, as students, can play in defending children’s rights. I want my research to change the lives of the most vulnerable,” said Linda Djarsoumna, Communication student at the University of Yaoundé II.
Clémence, Sociology PhD candidate at the University of Yaoundé I:
“We need an interdisciplinary approach. Children’s rights are not just for lawyers—they concern sociologists, psychologists, economists. This conference gives us the tools to work together.”
Miguel, recent UCAC Master’s graduate:
“Seeing international experts and African leaders engage with us is inspiring. It proves that young voices matter in shaping public policies.”Workshops: From Theory to ActionThe event went beyond speeches. Practical workshops enabled participants to design concrete solutions: creating curricula for children in conflict situations, leveraging technology for child protection and monitoring, and developing university programs that integrate civic leadership.
In the digital innovation workshop, participants envisioned apps to report child rights violations and track field interventions. In the local governance workshop, scenarios were studied to involve municipalities in child protection and education.A Strong Message for the FutureThe Minister of Higher Education praised the initiative, stating:
“Integrating children’s rights into higher education is essential to train conscious and responsible elites. This conference marks a historic milestone for Cameroon and Africa.”With this conference, Yaoundé emerges not only as a hub for dialogue but as the starting point of a structured continental movement, aiming to make African universities strategic and sustainable actors of social transformation by placing children’s rights at the heart of public policies, academic knowledge, and social norms.When Yaoundé Puts Children’s Rights on the Political and Diplomatic AgendaAs guest of honor, Dr. Ghassan Khalil held high-level meetings with political authorities, religious leaders, parliamentarians, constitutional court representatives, and diplomatic missions accredited in Cameroon. These exchanges broadened the dialogue beyond academia and reinforced a cross-cutting vision of children’s rights as a shared priority for public policies, legal frameworks, and social dynamics.
By the scope and diversity of these meetings, the conference positioned Cameroon as a strategic dialogue and innovation hub for children’s rights, at the intersection of academic, political, and diplomatic spheres.
“The university must be a beacon for society: a place where science meets ethics, where elite training goes hand in hand with a commitment to human dignity and children’s rights. The child is the father of man and the future of Africa,” stressed Rev. Fr. Prof. Thomas Bienvenu Tchoungui, Rector of UCAC.An Inclusive and Participatory DynamicChildren and adolescents were at the heart of the discussions, notably during a special dialogue marking World Children’s Day. Plenary sessions addressed key themes: digital innovation, local governance, health and inclusion, conflict-sensitive curricula, and cross-sector partnerships. Far from symbolic participation, these spaces allowed children and adolescents to express their expectations, priorities, and proposals, directly contributing to policy and program reflections.
For Ghassan Khalil, UNICEF Representative in Greece:
“Promoting children’s rights in Africa means combining our cultural heritage with international standards. This alliance is the key to sustainable public policies adapted to local realities. Universities are not just places of knowledge; they are engines of social transformation.”Engaged Student VoicesStudents expressed enthusiasm and commitment to this initiative:
“This conference opened my eyes to the role we, as students, can play in defending children’s rights. I want my research to change the lives of the most vulnerable,” said Linda Djarsoumna, Communication student at the University of Yaoundé II.
Clémence, Sociology PhD candidate at the University of Yaoundé I:
“We need an interdisciplinary approach. Children’s rights are not just for lawyers—they concern sociologists, psychologists, economists. This conference gives us the tools to work together.”
Miguel, recent UCAC Master’s graduate:
“Seeing international experts and African leaders engage with us is inspiring. It proves that young voices matter in shaping public policies.”Workshops: From Theory to ActionThe event went beyond speeches. Practical workshops enabled participants to design concrete solutions: creating curricula for children in conflict situations, leveraging technology for child protection and monitoring, and developing university programs that integrate civic leadership.
In the digital innovation workshop, participants envisioned apps to report child rights violations and track field interventions. In the local governance workshop, scenarios were studied to involve municipalities in child protection and education.A Strong Message for the FutureThe Minister of Higher Education praised the initiative, stating:
“Integrating children’s rights into higher education is essential to train conscious and responsible elites. This conference marks a historic milestone for Cameroon and Africa.”With this conference, Yaoundé emerges not only as a hub for dialogue but as the starting point of a structured continental movement, aiming to make African universities strategic and sustainable actors of social transformation by placing children’s rights at the heart of public policies, academic knowledge, and social norms.When Yaoundé Puts Children’s Rights on the Political and Diplomatic AgendaAs guest of honor, Dr. Ghassan Khalil held high-level meetings with political authorities, religious leaders, parliamentarians, constitutional court representatives, and diplomatic missions accredited in Cameroon. These exchanges broadened the dialogue beyond academia and reinforced a cross-cutting vision of children’s rights as a shared priority for public policies, legal frameworks, and social dynamics.
By the scope and diversity of these meetings, the conference positioned Cameroon as a strategic dialogue and innovation hub for children’s rights, at the intersection of academic, political, and diplomatic spheres.
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Press Release
21 July 2025
Multi-Stakeholder Consultative Platform UN Technical Assistance to the 2025–2027 Electoral Cycle in Cameroon
Multi-Stakeholder Consultative PlatformUN Technical Assistance to the 2025–2027 Electoral Cycle in CameroonMbankomo, 26 June 2025 – From 25 to 26 June 2025, stakeholders in Cameroon’s electoral process convened in Mbankomo to deliberate on the theme: “Safeguarding Electoral Integrity and Preventing Risks for Peaceful, Inclusive and Transparent Elections in Cameroon (2025–2026).” The Multi-Stakeholder Consultative Platforms brought together over 150 leaders from political parties, civil society organizations, traditional and religious authorities, independent institutions, and government institutions. After the opening plenary session by Dr. Enow Abrams Egbe, President of ELECAM, and H.E. Abdou Abarry, United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG), in the presence of Dr. Issa Sanogo, the United Nations Resident Coordinator in Cameroon, stakeholders engaged in thematic breakout discussions, focusing on:Electoral transparency, trust-building, and the resolution of electoral disputes, discussed by the group of government ministries and independent institutions.Civic and voter participation, including recruitment and deployment of party/candidate representatives during elections, discussed by the group of political parties.Inclusion of women, youth, persons with disabilities, minorities, and marginalized groups, discussed by civil society organizations.Media and information integrity, including strategies to combat disinformation, discussed by the groups of political parties.Protection of electoral integrity through risk assessment and mitigation strategies, discussed by government ministries and independent institutions.These discussions aimed to promote continuous and constructive dialogue among electoral stakeholders before, during, and after the electoral cycle. Participants underscored the importance of inclusivity in election participation and the critical role of stakeholders in supporting peaceful and transparent elections.At the close of the platform, stakeholders presented the outcomes of their breakout group work in a final plenary session. This restitution session served as a space for feedback, convergence of ideas, and reaffirmation of shared commitments. It also marked the formal conclusion of the Multi-Stakeholder Consultative Platform.The chairpersons expressed their satisfaction with the constructive commitment and democratic dialogue engaged by the stakeholders. “This Multi-Stakeholder Platform reflects our collective commitment to dialogue, transparency, and peace. Together, we have the duty to create the conditions for inclusive, credible, and risk-free elections in Cameroon. ELECAM is pleased to lead this collaborative effort in line with our democratic responsibilities. I sincerely commend all stakeholders for their constructive spirit and commitment throughout these two days of discussion. Let us now build on this momentum by deepening voter education, strengthening participation, and ensuring every citizen can vote with confidence in 2025." Dr. Enow Abrams Egbe, President, Elections Cameroon.“This Multi-Stakeholder Platform is not an end but a step toward open, inclusive, and sustained dialogue. Safeguarding electoral integrity and preventing risks is a shared responsibility that demands unity, civic duty, and patriotism. I commend all stakeholders for their active engagement, thoughtful contributions, and spirit of partnership during this platform. Now is the time to act, to put into practice the ideas shared, promote responsible discourse, and an enabling environment for inclusive, peaceful, and credible elections. H.E. Abdou Abarry, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for Central Africa (UNOCA).Participants expressed strong support for sustained engagement, ongoing collaboration, and inclusive participation throughout the electoral cycle. "Such a consultative platform is an important initiative because it offers a space for open dialogue." Mme. Cyrille Rolande Bechon, civil society representative.“This workshop has shown ELECAM’s strong commitment, with the support of the United Nations, for peaceful, free, and transparent elections in our country. We worked in a convivial atmosphere with freedom of expression. We look forward to the implementation of the recommendations made." Hon. Koupit Adamou, Member of Parliament“This has been a very important meeting because it brought together stakeholders from different sectors and allowed them to voice their concerns. The facilitators provided us with the space that allowed open reflection on what is not working well and what can be improved, which permitted us to provide concrete recommendations. I am especially pleased that persons with disabilities, women, and youth, often left out, were brought to the table." Prof. Joyce Endeley, Advocate for Inclusive Participation.
The meeting was convened by Elections Cameroon (ELECAM), with the support of United Nations Cameroon, under Component One of the Project for UN Technical Assistance to the 2025–2027 Electoral Cycle in Cameroon.For further information, please contact:
The meeting was convened by Elections Cameroon (ELECAM), with the support of United Nations Cameroon, under Component One of the Project for UN Technical Assistance to the 2025–2027 Electoral Cycle in Cameroon.For further information, please contact:
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Press Release
09 May 2025
Launch of the United Nations Technical Assistance to the 2025-2027 Electoral Cycle in Cameroon
Launch of the United Nations Technical Assistance to the 2025-2027 Electoral Cycle in CameroonYaoundé, 09 May 2025– United Nations Cameroon, in collaboration with Elections Cameroon (ELECAM), launched the United Nations technical assistance to the 2025-2027 electoral cycle in Cameroon. The ceremony was presided over by the President of Elections Cameroon, Dr. ENOW Abrams EGBE, and United Nations Resident Coordinator, Dr. Issa SANOGO.The electoral assistance project is a UN contribution to fostering a peaceful and inclusive environment before, during, and after the elections, while strengthening ELECAM's institutional capacities. The project is a result of ELECAM’s request for assistance from the UNSG, the recommendations of the Needs Assessment Mission (NAM), and the decision of the United Nations (UN) focal point delimiting the areas of intervention of the technical assistance.More specifically, the project will (i) promote multi-stakeholder dialogue to help ensure a peaceful electoral process, particularly through consultative platforms and joint commissions, while also targeting specific groups of actors (such as religious leaders, media, civil society organizations, including women’s and youth organizations); (ii) support the strengthening of ELECAM’s institutional capacities, including the training of its staff and officials to enhance their preparedness and ability to organize and manage the elections effectively; and (iii) promote inclusion, civic participation, and voter education among all actors in the electoral process, particularly women, youth, the media, persons with disabilities, and socially vulnerable groups.“The importance of peace and stability in a country, particularly before, during, and after elections, is crucial. It is our conviction that this technical assistance, implemented within the One UN framework, will contribute to peaceful and inclusive elections in Cameroon, putting love, patriotism, and responsibility above all other interests.” Dr. Issa SANOGO, United Nations Resident Coordinator in Cameroon. The implementation of the project within the UN System will be coordinated technically by UNDP, with the participation of UN Women, UNESCO, UNFPA, IOM, and OHCHR, under the overall strategic coordination of the Resident Coordinator.“The project will significantly empower our staff and the stakeholders of the electoral process with the skills they need to meet the challenges of organizing, managing, and supervising the 2025-2026 electoral cycle.” Dr. ENOW Abrams EGBE, President of Elections Cameroon.Project InceptionFollowing Elections Cameroon's (ELECAM) correspondence of 13 May 2024 requesting UN technical assistance for the 2025-2026 electoral cycle, comprising presidential, regional, legislative, and municipal elections, as well as senatorial elections, an Electoral Needs Assessment Mission (NAM) was deployed from 1 to 12 July 2024. The mission was led by the Electoral Assistance Division (DAE) of the Department of Political Affairs and Peacebuilding (DPPA), with the participation of DPPA's Central Africa Regional Division, the UN Office for Central Africa (UNOCA), and the UNDP Regional Service Centre for Africa (RBA). Considering the specific context, the recommendations of the NAM, and the strategic orientations of the UN Resident Coordinator in Cameroon, the UNDP led/conducted a consultative approach between the different agencies likely to be involved in the electoral process. Following this, a task force made up of focal points from UNDP, UN-Women, IOM, OHCHR, UNESCO, and UNFPA was set up to improve the coordination and coherence of the United Nations System's (UNS) electoral assistance to Cameroon. The project is aligned with the UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF) 2022-2026 for Cameroon, which provides the overall framework for UN development cooperation in line with national development priorities. It covers elections in support of institutional capacity building and the promotion of citizen participation (strategic priority 3). About the United Nations in CameroonThe United Nations system in Cameroon is led by a team whose leadership is based on mutual accountability towards the UN's results in the country. The coordination function is strengthened and overseen by the United Nations Resident Coordinator in Cameroon, the designated representative of the Secretary-General for development operations. The country team works together, based on a "Delivering as One" approach, customized to respond more effectively to Cameroon's development priorities and humanitarian needs, as mandated by the United Nations. Currently, the United Nations system in Cameroon is made up of 22 agencies, funds, and resident and non-resident programs. Contacts:Mr. Stean Tshiband
UN Peace and Development Advisor
UN Resident Coordinator’s Office
Tel: +237 692 556 550
Email: stean.tshiband1@un.orgOffice of the UN Resident Coordinator, United Nations CameroonWebsite: http://www.cm.one.un.o X: UN_CamroonFacebook: United Nations Cameroon United Nations Development Programmehttp://www.cm.undp.orgX: PNUD CamerounFacebook: PNUD CameroonEmail: registry.cm@undp.org Tel: (+237) 677 937 086, 696 924 005About Elections CameroonElections Cameroon is an independent body responsible for the organization, management, and supervision of all election and referendum operations in Cameroon. It performs its duties in line with the constitution, laws, and regulations in force. It has a legal personality and management autonomy. The Head Office of Elections Cameroon is in Yaounde. Elections Cameroon for inclusive, credible, and peaceful elections! ContactsMr. Enow Dickson
Technical Adviser No 1
ELECAM
Tel: +237 677 050 272
Email: enowenowdickson@gmail.comElections Cameroon (ELECAM)Website: www.elecam.cm Facebook: Elections Cameroon - ELECAMX: ELECAM Elections Cameroon
UN Peace and Development Advisor
UN Resident Coordinator’s Office
Tel: +237 692 556 550
Email: stean.tshiband1@un.orgOffice of the UN Resident Coordinator, United Nations CameroonWebsite: http://www.cm.one.un.o X: UN_CamroonFacebook: United Nations Cameroon United Nations Development Programmehttp://www.cm.undp.orgX: PNUD CamerounFacebook: PNUD CameroonEmail: registry.cm@undp.org Tel: (+237) 677 937 086, 696 924 005About Elections CameroonElections Cameroon is an independent body responsible for the organization, management, and supervision of all election and referendum operations in Cameroon. It performs its duties in line with the constitution, laws, and regulations in force. It has a legal personality and management autonomy. The Head Office of Elections Cameroon is in Yaounde. Elections Cameroon for inclusive, credible, and peaceful elections! ContactsMr. Enow Dickson
Technical Adviser No 1
ELECAM
Tel: +237 677 050 272
Email: enowenowdickson@gmail.comElections Cameroon (ELECAM)Website: www.elecam.cm Facebook: Elections Cameroon - ELECAMX: ELECAM Elections Cameroon
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Press Release
25 September 2023
Readout of the Secretary-General’s meeting with H.E. Mr. Lejeune Mbella Mbella, Minister for External Relations of the Republic of Cameroon
They discussed the situation in Cameroon, including in the North-West, South-West and Far North regions. They also discussed the global consequences of the war in Ukraine as well as the need to reform the international financial architecture. The Secretary-General reiterated the United Nations commitment to support Cameroon.
New York, 25 September 2023
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