- David Smith visits Cameroon on the 50th anniversary of independence
David Smith visits Cameroon in Africa on the 50th anniversary of independenceDavid Smith
David Smith氏はアフリカのindependenceDavidスミスの50周年カメルーンを訪問
- Backgrounder: Basic facts about Cameroon (2)
In recent years, Cameroon has adopted many policies to boost economic development, which helped the country maintain growth in its gross domestic product (GDP). In 2008, the GDP of Cameroon reached 22.1 billion U.S. dollars, up 3.9 percent from the previous year, with per capita GDP standing at 1,171 dollars.
Now, agriculture and stock breeding are the economic pillars of the country, with tourism as a newly developed sector.
China and Cameroon established diplomatic ties on March 26, 1971 ... 近年では、カメルーンが、これは国内総生産(GDP)の成長を維持する国を助け、経済発展のために多くの政策を採用しています
- Backgrounder: Basic facts about Cameroon
Jia Qinglin, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, arrives in Yaounde on Tuesday to start his three-day official visit to the Republic of Cameroon.
The following are some basic facts about Cameroon.
Located in central and western Africa, Cameroon is bordered by Nigeria to the west, Chad to the northeast, the Central African Republic and the Republic of the Congo to the east, Gabon and Equatorial Guinea to the south.
Yaounde is the ... 賈慶林議長は、全国委員会は、中国人民政治協商会議の委員長、ヤウンデ月31日に彼の3つのカメルーン共和国への公式訪問を開始するに到着します
- Roy Greenslade: Protesting Cameroon journalists clash with police
Journalists protesting about the death of a Cameroonian newspaper editor have clashed with riot police in the capital Yaounde. Several hundred demonstrators were prevented from staging a sit-in at the prime minister's office to mark World Press Freedom day.Cameroon Express editor Bibi Ngota died last month in a Yaounde prison, as I reported here. His family rejects the government's explanation that he died of an HIV-related infection.The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists says it holds the authorities responsible for Ngota's death.Newspapers in Cameroon are subject to considerable official restrictions and constrained by tough libel legislation.Source: BBC Press freedomCameroonGreenslade on AfricaRoy Greensladeguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
ジャーナリストは、カメルーンの新聞の編集者の死についての首都ヤウンデで警察と衝突して抗議
- Pilot error blamed for deadly 2007 crash
NAIROBI - An investigative report released this week blames pilot error for the 2007 crash of Kenya Airways flight in Cameroon that killed all 114 people on board.The pilot of the Kenya Airways flight didn't notice the plane was... ナイロビは - 調査報告書発表今週はカメルーンでケニア航空のフライトの飛行機に気付かなかったケニア航空のフライトの6種類のパイロット上のすべての114人が死亡した2007クラッシュのためのパイロットエラーのせいだった...
- African leaders: countries for old men
Robert Mugabe is the eldest statesman on a continent where age is seldom a barrier to powerLet them eat cake. That is one of the likely headlines after an all-night birthday gala for Robert Mugabe, the autocratic president of Zimbabwe, which was due to finish in the early hours of yesterday. Mugabe, who last week turned 86 in a country where average life expectancy stands at 45, is the eldest statesman on a continent where age is seldom a barrier to power.But events confronting both Nigerians and Nigeriens in the past week have demonstrated that the next generation of African leaders might find it somewhat harder to crush all comers.President Mamadou Tandja of Niger, who had rewritten the constitution rather than quit when his term expired, paid the penalty when soldiers stormed the presidential palace and spirited him away in a military coup. Diplomats were ambivalent about whether to condemn the means or praise the ends.President Umaru Yar'Adua of Nigeria, who created a power vacuum when he disappeared in November for medical treatment in Saudi Arabia, returned at dead of night to a country where politicians, lawyers, media and ordinary citizens have made their demands for accountability and transparency clear. Yar'Adua's deputy, Goodluck Jonathan, remains at the helm while questions linger over the president's health.In recent times, the objections raised to the likes of Menzies Campbell and John McCain in recent British and American election campaigns rarely keep politicians awake here.Africa's club of leaders of pensionable age includes Egypt's Hosni Mubarak, 81, Cameroon's Paul Biya, 77, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali of Tunisia, 73, Muammar Gaddafi of Libya, believed to be 67, Eduardo dos Santos of Angola, also 67, Denis Sassou Nguesso of Congo-Brazzaville, thought to b ロバートムガベ大統領の大陸では年齢はほとんどがケーキを食べるpowerLetにバリアされている長男の政治家です
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