TDS; Passports, Visas, Travel Documents Kirdi , nonIslamic or recently Islamic peoples of the bamileke people from this areahave in recent Religions Christian 53%, Muslim 22%, indigenous African 25 http://www.traveldocs.com/cm/people.htm
Extractions: Cameroon Cameroon's estimated 250 ethnic groups form five large regional-cultural groups: western highlanders (or grassfielders), including the Bamileke, Bamoun, and many smaller entities in the northwest (est. 38% of population); coastal tropical forest peoples, including the Bassa, Douala, and many smaller entities in the Southwest (12%); southern tropical forest peoples, including the Ewondo, Bulu (subgroup of Beti), Fang (subgroup of Beti), Maka and Pygmies (officially called Bakas) (18%); predominantly Islamic peoples of the northern semi-arid regions (the Sahel) and central highlands, including the Fulani, also known as Peuhl in French (14%); and the "Kirdi", non-Islamic or recently Islamic peoples of the northern desert and central highlands (18%). The people concentrated in the southwest and northwest provincesaround Buea and Bamendause standard English and "pidgin," as well as their local languages. In the three northern provincesAdamaoua, north, and far northeither French or Fulfulde, the language of the Fulani, is widely spoken. Elsewhere, French is the principal second language, although pidgin and some local languages such as Ewondo, the dialect of a Beti clan from the Yaounde area, also are widely spoken. Although Yaounde is Cameroon's capital, Douala is the largest city, main seaport, and main industrial and commercial center.
Demographics Of Cameroon - Wikipedia Kirdi , nonIslamic or recently Islamic peoples of the bamileke people from this areahave in recent Religions indigenous beliefs 40%, Christian 40%, Muslim 20 http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Cameroon
Extractions: Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk Log in Help From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Cameroon's estimated 250 ethnic groups form five large regional-cultural groups: western highlanders (or grassfielders), including the Bamileke Bamoun , and many smaller entities in the Northwest (est. 38% of population); coastal tropical forest peoples, including the Bassa Douala , and many smaller entities in the Southwest (12%); southern tropical forest peoples, including the Beti Bulu (subgroup of Beti), Fang (subgroup of Beti), and Pygmies (officially called Bakas) (18%); predominantly Islamic peoples of the northern semi-arid regions (the Sahel ) and central highlands, including the
Extractions: is said to contain all of Africa in one country. Geographically it varies from tropical rain forest in the south to the arid savanna of the Sahel in the north. Ethnically the indigenous peoples range from pygmies to the colourfully shrouded Fulani. Despite this diversity Cameroon is a rarely visited country and so offers the chance to see a part of Africa unspoilt by large scale tourism. AidCamps International Short Term Volunteer Work Overseas on Third World Development Aid Projects in conjunction with Strategic Humanitarian Services 1st to 22nd of November 2003 Village Primary School AidCamp Our partner organisation in Cameroon, Strategic Humanitarian Services (SHUMAS) works to help the rural peoples in the English speaking part of the country, who are primarily subsistence farmers living a traditional life style, most without the benefits of running water or electricity. SHUMAS aims to improve the situation of these people by, amongst other things, helping to create income generating activities, facilitating womens credit union cooperatives, and the provision of local infrastructure improvements such as running water and farm-to-market bridges.
WREEN largest of which are the Fang, bamileke, Fulani, and Christian 53 per cent, Indigenousbeliefs 25 per cent The southern Bantuspeaking peoples use a variety of http://www.wreen.com/maps/africa/cameroon.htm
Extractions: ALGERIA Angola BENIN BOTSWANA BURKINA FASO BURUNDI CAMEROON CAPE VERDE CHAD CONGO COTE D'IVOIRE D.R.Congo DJIBOUTI EGYPT EQUATORIAL GUINEA ERITREA ETHIOPIA GABON GAMBIA GHANA GUINEA GUINEA-BISSAU KENYA LESOTHO LIBERIA LIBYA MADAGASCAR MALAWI MALI MAURITANIA MAURITIUS MOROCCO MOZAMBIQUE NAMIBIA NIGER NIGERIA RWANDA SENEGAL SEYCHELLES SIERRA LEONE SOMALIA SOUTH AFRICA SUDAN SWAZILAND TANZANIA TOGO TUNISIA UGANDA ZAMBIA ZIMBABWE Africa Antarctica Asia Australia/Oceania ... The World
CERD/C/298/Add.3 - State Party Report - Cameroon are considered as its authentic indigenous inhabitants. Kotoko, Sudanese, Peulh andBantu peoples settled in West provinces include the bamileke, Bamoun, Tikar http://www.hri.ca/fortherecord1998/documentation/tbodies/cerd-c-298-add3.htm
Extractions: UNDER ARTICLE 9 OF THE CONVENTION Fourteenth periodic reports of States parties due in 1998 Addendum Cameroon [12 August 1997] * This report incorporates in a single document the tenth, eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth periodic reports of Cameroon due on 24 July 1990, 1992, 1994 and 1996 respectively. For the ninth periodic report of Cameroon and the summary records of the Committee's meetings at which the report was considered, see CERD/C/171/Add.1 and CERD/C/SR.880-881 respectively. Introduction 1. This report incorporates the tenth, eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth periodic reports of Cameroon, submitted late, under article 9 of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. It principally covers the period from August 1990 to June 1997. 2. The report contains
Erdöl-Kampagne Tschad/Kamerun Bantu speakers from equatorial africa were among the or grass landers) including theBamileke, Bamoun and failed to protect the indigenous peoples access to http://www.erdoel-tschad.de/dokumente/adequate-food.html
Extractions: The right to adequate food (Art. 11) and violations of this right in Cameroon Preface FIAN, the International Human Rights Organisation for the Right to Feed Oneself, would like to present a parallel report to the periodic report on Cameroon submitted by the Cameroonian Government (UN Doc. E/1990/5/Add.35.). Of the many questions concerning economic human rights in Cameroon FIAN, in cooperation with COSADER/COASAD, will concentrate on the right to freedom from hunger and the right to adequate food. Cameroon is a state party to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. In Art. 11 of the ICESCR, the States parties guarantee the right to freedom from hunger and the right to adequate food. More specifically, the right to adequate food derives from the following obligations of States elucidated in Article 11: Respect existing access to adequate food requires States parties not to take any measures that result in preventing this access. Protect requires measures to be taken by the State to ensure that enterprises or individuals do not deprive individuals of their access to adequate food. Fulfil , means that the States must pro-actively engage in activities intended to strengthen peoples access to and utilisation of resources and means to ensure their livelihood, including food security. Wherever an individual or group is unable, for reasons beyond their control, to enjoy the right to adequate food by the means at their disposal, States have the obligation to fulfil (provide) this right directly.
The Anthropology Of Anger Chapter 3 literatureand then determine what is truly indigenous in the current worldviewof the peoples on this bamileke or Yoruba art objects are assessed on the http://www.ciaonet.org/book/monga/monga03.html
Extractions: Bibliography Never in history has there been as much wealth created on this planet than over the last 15 years. Yet the gap between rich and poor, far from decreasing, has been widening. The 1996 UNDP World Report on Human Development states that this is not only true at world level - the well known gap between North and South - but also in countries which enjoyed comfortable growth rates and in western countries with an old industrial background. In the USA, 15% of the citizens live below the poverty line. In Europe, there are no less than 25.000.000 unemployed, many of them young. In France, 2.000.000 people resort to food aid. James Speth, director general of UNDP warns that this system of increasing polarization is leading our planet to a situation which is not only unethical but "unhuman". Violence is threatening everywhere, as chairman of the IMF board of governors, Ph. Maystadt, said recently. We are watching the dawnfall of the wellfare state. Since the Reagan and Thatcher years. Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAP) and monetarist policies lead to frustration and anger. "Globalization is creating in our democracies an underclass of demoralized and empoverished citizens" observes former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich. Malnutrition and material poverty is spreading in some countries of the South or remains desparately stable in many others. Even where SAP do achieve positive results in terms of public debt and inflation rates, their social impact remain harmful.
Extractions: The African upswing was to be brought brutally to a halt, directly and indirectly, by the transformations which were affecting Western Europe. First there was the development of the trade in slaves destined for the American colonies, the role of which in the accumulation of capital in Western Europe is well known. Africa's destiny as a 'commercial reserve for the hunting of people with black skins' was not finally sealed till the end of the sixteenth century. The Portuguese, who had sighted the coast during the fifteenth century, had at first wanted to procure gold and spices, and with this in view had penetrated the continent very early; even at the end of the sixteenth century, some adventurers still hoped to create another Brazil in Africa
1998 Human Rights Report - Cameroon Country Report indigenous People. and to favor other groups, such as the large bamileke and Anglophone andthe Kirdi, the descendents of diverse animist peoples whom the http://www.usis.usemb.se/human/human1998/cameroon.html
Extractions: February 1999 TOC Preface Introduction Africa ... Appendixes Internal security responsibilities are shared by the national police, the National Intelligence Service (DGRE), the gendarmerie, the Ministry of Territorial Administration, military intelligence, the army, and to a lesser extent, the Presidential Security Service. The police and the gendarmerie have dominant roles in enforcing internal security laws. The security forces, including the military forces, remain under the effective control of the President, the civilian Minister of Defense, and the civilian head of police. The security forces continued to commit numerous serious human rights abuses. In June, the Government launched a 6-month nationwide human rights awareness campaign via the government-controlled media, which was supplemented by seminars, parades, and other activities. RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From:
Cameroon Travel Information Kirdi , nonIslamic or recently Islamic peoples of the bamileke people from this areahave in recent years African less than 1% Religions indigenous beliefs 40 http://motherearthtravel.com/cameroon/
Extractions: Hotels in Cameroon Facts About Cameroon Background: The former French Cameroon and part of British Cameroon merged in 1961 to form the present country. Cameroon has generally enjoyed stability, which has permitted the development of agriculture, roads, and railways, as well as a petroleum industry. Despite movement toward democratic reform, political power remains firmly in the hands of an ethnic oligarchy.
Notes On Anthropology Contents Skulls, gods, and revenge in bamileke, by Stephen C God concept among the EasternSudanic peoples of southern by Joseph E. Grimes indigenous medicine Modern http://www.sil.org/lingualinks/Anthropology/NotesOnAnthropology/CONTENTS.HTM
Extractions: Notes on Anthropology Complete Table of Contents Front Matter Editorial, by Karl J. Franklin The American Anthropological Association Meetings held in Denver, Colorado: November 14, 18, 1984, by Carol McKinney Narcotics, vitality, and honor: The use of narcotic drink among the Samo of Papua New Guinea , by R. Daniel Shaw Introduction Samo vitality and ceremony Male vitality and kava use Kava: Distribution, use, and effects Conclusion Back Matter References On recording ethnographic field notes, by Thomas N. Headland Music in cross-cultural communication, by Vida Chenoweth The role of shaman stones, by Carolyn Orr Introduction Description Acquisition of the stones Owner's responsibility to his stones Activities of the stone Countermeasures to stone protection Summary Back Matter References Methodology Questions 1, 2, 29, and 30 Questions 3 to 5 Questions 7 and 8 Questions 9 through 13 Questions 14 through 16 Question 18 Question 19 Questions 20 and 21 Questions 23 and 24 Conclusions Survival of the family Material goods and subsistence Emotional health and maintenance of the established order Back Matter Appendix References Review: The spoken word and the work of interpretation, by Ted Engel
Worldcup Prayer of the foreign cultures and its indigenous one, despite ask you to help all the peoples,including Croats 2000 est.) Ethnic Groups Fang, bamileke, Duala, Fulani http://smb.prokseoul.or.kr/prok_info/wp_e.htm
Extractions: Lord, we thank you for giving us beautiful chansons over the Han River. Please make us to enjoy the cheerful fellowship with French people, who have a beautiful country of art. Lord, we remember the faith that has been kept and developed by the French brethren. The blood of Huguenot martyrs has brought the freedom of faith. The blood that loves people and peace has existed vividly from Jeanna d'Arc. We give you special thanks, because the flowing of freedom, equality and charity has been originated and the democracy has prevailed worldwide through this country. And the age of human right, which means every human who resembles God's image is treated equally, has opened from here. Help them to succeed the faith of blood and the precious inheritance for good, so that they may be a torch of the human history. Lord, please be with France. May the righteous politics of God's justice be done in this country. Let their daily life be a peace festival without any discrimination including racism and religious distinction. In the midst of the fallen world, which respects matter and money and pursues power and authority, let them spread the pure hearts, simple lives and warm love throughout the world, just as Saint-Exupery's Little Prince did them with his starry eyes and pure spirit. And so, please lead all the humans to have the mind of Jesus Christ and to return to the kingodm of God. In Jesus' name. Amen.
GMI World - Spring 2002 P.3 Mission BINAM, an indigenous ministry dedicated to reaching the first map of Bamilekepeoples comes off husband, Stan, ministered to africa Independent Church http://www.gmi.org/gmi_info/02fall_3.htm
Extractions: GMI World A Publication of Global Mapping International Serving Evangelical Ministry Leaders Around the World Fall 2002 Mission Views and News - For God so loved Iraq... From the President - GMI - focused on mission research GMI Current Project - GMI responds to growing demand for mission mapping GMI Ministry Impact - Mapping the Bamileke of Cameroon ... Subscribe GMI Ministry Impact EVANGELISTS IN THE central African country of Cameroon can now clearly see their progress in reaching their countrymen with the good news of Jesus Christ. Mission BINAM, an indigenous ministry dedicated to reaching the largely animistic peoples of western Cameroon, hopes to plant a church within each of the 129 Bamileke villages. They recently sent two of their leaders, Rev. Alain Bouwa and Harold Wafo, to participate in GMIs Visiting Trainee program. In our offices, working side by side with GMI mission cartographers, they learned how to systematically map the whole Bamileke area, consisting of 14 different ethno-linguistic groups. They developed detailed maps showing the villages, principal towns, and language areas of western Cameroon. In addition, they created large wall maps displaying where they are working, and where the greatest spiritual needs are.
Africans Art must consider both perspectives the indigenous as well the cultures of other peoplesonly by from a longstanding Western, imperialistic involvement in africa. http://www.webzinemaker.net/africans-art/index.php3?action=page&id_art=360
Africans Art 15,000 members of the Bidjogo peoples inhabit some manage to preserve many indigenoustraits. Benin Urhobo Igbo Akuapem Akye bamileke Bamun Baule http://www.webzinemaker.net/africans-art/index.php3?action=page&id_rubr=38
SIL Bibliography: Ethnography Skulls, gods and revenge in bamileke. Annett, Mary in the Congo Implications forindigenous foragers and concept among the Eastern Sudanic peoples of southern http://www.ethnologue.com/show_subject.asp?code=ETN