By July 10 this year, Nigeria may lose 24 local councils, by way of
ceding, to a new country to be known as United Nations Organisation
(UNO) State of Cameroon at its borders with la Republique du Cameroun.
The Guardian learnt that the withdrawal of his country’s soldiers by
President Paul Biya from the southern part of the planned UNO State of
Cameroon has set the stage for the creation of the new state being
spearheaded by the UN.
The withdrawal of troops by Biya was formally demanded by the former
President of the United Nations General Assembly, Ali A. Treki on May
20, 2020. This was disclosed in a May 26, 2020 letter of the UNO State
of Cameroon to Prof. Martins Chia Ateh, the United Nations-appointed
workshops coordinator in Cameroon and Nigeria. Ateh said in the letter: “Greetings and thank you very much for the
attached list of those who were detained in the Nkambe prison of
Cameroon in August 2008. “It is only now that the soldiers of la Republique du Cameroun are
being withdrawn from the southern part of UNO State of Cameroon.” He
said it was a good thing Treki kept the records straight.On UN’s creation of a new country in Africa, Ateh said: “I should be
getting back to you once the United Nations finishes with an official
announcement on the existence of UNO State of Cameroon to the
international community.”
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