Communiqué
adopted at
the twenty-third meeting of
the Cameroon-Nigeria Mixed Commission
established
pursuant to the Joint Geneva communiqué of 15 November 2002
*
Yaoundé, 10 October 2008
1. The
Cameroon-Nigeria Mixed Commission, which was established pursuant to the
Joint Communiqué adopted at the meeting held on 15 November 2002 in Geneva
between His Excellency President Paul Biya of Cameroon and His Excellency
President Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria, in the presence of the Secretary
General of the United Nations, held its Twenty-third Ordinary Meeting in
Yaounde on 9 and 10 October 2008. Mr. Said Djinnit, Special Representative
of the Secretary General of the United Nations chaired the deliberations of
the Mixed Commission in the presence of Vice-Prime Minister Amadou Ali of
Cameroon and Alh. S. M. Diggi, Director General of National Boundary
Commission of Nigeria, who led the Cameroonian and Nigerian Delegations
respectively.
2. The
Mixed Commission was pleased with the excellent relations existing between
Cameroon and Nigeria which enabled the withdrawal and transfer of authority
from the Zone in the Bakassi Peninsula, pursuant to the Greentree Agreement
of 12 June 2006. It also expressed satisfaction that the 4th Session of the
Cameroon-Nigeria Joint Commission was able to meet in Yaounde with effect
from 9 October 2008.
3. The
Mixed Commission examined and adopted the report of the Twenty-second
Meeting of the Sub-Commission on Demarcation held in Yaounde on 7 and 8
October 2008. The Mixed Commission took note that the Joint Technical Team
will arrive in the field on 1 or 2 November in order to resume its work
latest by 3 November 2008 in connection with Phase 3C of the field
assessment which covers about 245 km of the boundary. The Mixed Commission
requests the JTT to submit proposals to speed up the work with a view to
completing the field assessment by the end of 2009. Having noted the
endorsement of Cameroon and Nigeria for the UN to enter into an agreement
for the involvement of the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)
in the implementation of Contract 5A relating to demarcation and pillar
emplacement, the Mixed Commission set itself the goal of ensuring that
initial pillar emplacement activities should commence within the first weeks
of 2009.
4. The
Mixed Commission examined and adopted the reports of the Fourteenth Meeting
of the Working Group on the Maritime Boundary held on 8 October 2008 in
Yaounde. The Mixed Commission approved the following recommendations:
5. The
Mixed Commission took note of the presentation and exchanged views on the
oral report of the mission of the United Nations to Calabar, in Cross River
State, on the situation of Nigerian citizens who opted to return to Nigeria.
It expressed the wish that all effort will be made to find satisfactory
solutions to the situation of both Nigerian and Cameroonian populations
affected by the ICJ ruling of 10 October 2002. Thus, it was agreed that
other visits be made soon to the Bakassi Peninsula, the Lake Chad area and
other areas along the land boundary, for the purpose of strengthening
confidence building measures between the populations of both countries.
6. The
Mixed Commission requested its Chairman to extend an invitation to the
African Development Bank (ADB) to provide up-to-date information on the
Cameroon-Nigeria Multinational Highway Project at its 24th Session. It also
called on the two delegations to provide information on the steps so far
taken to address the issues of harmonization of laws, regulations and
standards governing the use of commercial vehicles and the movements of
goods and persons. It equally requested its Chairman to extend an invitation
to the Executive Secretariat of the Lake Chad Basin Commission to provide
information on the status of discussions on the Water Transfer Project from
Oubangui Basin to the Lake Chad.
7. The
Twenty-fourth meeting of the Mixed Commission shall take place in Abuja on
11 and 12 December 2008, with the possibility of extension to 13 December
2008.