The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) expressed [5]concern Oct. 30 over the protests and repression [6] that have swept Cameroon following contested presidential election results. Demonstrators defied a ban on protests to support the opposition after the Oct. 12 election, but the situation escalated [7] after the Constitutional Council announced five days later that long-ruling President Paul Biya had won. The opposition rejected the results and proclaimed their candidate, Issa Tchirola Bakary, as the legitimate winner, urging citizens to demonstrate peacefully. Thousands took to the streets demanding recognition of an opposition victory, but clashes [8]between protesters and security forces led to fatalities and numerous arrests. The protests have shaken the capital, Yaoundé; the economic capital, Douala; and the northern towns of Garoua and Maroua. Local jails are filled with opposition supporters [9] who accuse Biya of rigging [10] the polls. Biya is now to assume his eighth term in office, standing as the world's oldest [11] president, having ruled Cameroon for 43 years. (Jurist [14])



