The chief medical officer of Regional Hospital No. 2 has returned to service in Douala after a dangerous mission in the South West Region.
At the end of a corridor in the hospital compound of the second military health region in Bonanjo district in Douala, are the consultation room and the office of Colonel Chief Medical Officer Emile Abeng Mbozo'o. He resumed service on the morning of Monday, January 22, 2018, after a few weeks of absence spent on the Southwest side, a region where the defense and security forces are at war with the fighters of the secessionists who demand the independence of the western anglophone part of Cameroon.
Immediately, Colonel refused to every interview. He explains that he has opened his doors just to see that he is alive and dead, as some rumors have suggested.
Traveling south-west for a mission "which is neither the first nor the last," says Colonel Abeng Mbozo'o, he nearly passed away from life. But he stays alive. As well as all the other persons who were on board the vehicles of the convoy attacked on the section of the Ekondo-Titi-Kumba road, by suspected pro-secessionist snipers.
The convoy of ambulances and pick-ups, among other things, brought back to Kumba town people wounded in clashes between Cameroonian defense and security forces and activists Anglophone crisis.
Cameroon-info.net has learned that a dozen soldiers were in different vehicles riddled with bullets by "thugs" armed. But the bravery of men in uniform allowed them to get out of trouble, without any loss in human life.
The Colonel Chief Medical Officer and his team are traveling extensively in the South West Region to build and equip medical centers in remote locations with no hospital training.
Source : CIN
At the end of a corridor in the hospital compound of the second military health region in Bonanjo district in Douala, are the consultation room and the office of Colonel Chief Medical Officer Emile Abeng Mbozo'o. He resumed service on the morning of Monday, January 22, 2018, after a few weeks of absence spent on the Southwest side, a region where the defense and security forces are at war with the fighters of the secessionists who demand the independence of the western anglophone part of Cameroon.
Immediately, Colonel refused to every interview. He explains that he has opened his doors just to see that he is alive and dead, as some rumors have suggested.
Traveling south-west for a mission "which is neither the first nor the last," says Colonel Abeng Mbozo'o, he nearly passed away from life. But he stays alive. As well as all the other persons who were on board the vehicles of the convoy attacked on the section of the Ekondo-Titi-Kumba road, by suspected pro-secessionist snipers.
The convoy of ambulances and pick-ups, among other things, brought back to Kumba town people wounded in clashes between Cameroonian defense and security forces and activists Anglophone crisis.
Cameroon-info.net has learned that a dozen soldiers were in different vehicles riddled with bullets by "thugs" armed. But the bravery of men in uniform allowed them to get out of trouble, without any loss in human life.
The Colonel Chief Medical Officer and his team are traveling extensively in the South West Region to build and equip medical centers in remote locations with no hospital training.
Source : CIN