Nigeria and Cameroon request UN help in resolving Bakassi rights
The leaders of Nigeria and Cameroon have agreed to ask a United Nations-backed commission to consider ways of
following up on last month's ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on the rights to the disputed Bakassi
peninsula, a move hailed by Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
According to a communiqué issued following the Secretary General's meeting with Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo
of Nigeria and Paul Biya of Cameroon, Mr Annan welcomed "their renewed commitment, as Heads of State of law-abiding
countries, to renounce the use of force in their bilateral relations and pursue peaceful ways for the settlement of
their boundary differences, as well as the constructive spirit which prevailed throughout the various meetings held
during the day."
On 10 October, the ICJ essentially awarded Cameroon rights to the oil-rich peninsula. Two weeks later, Nigeria said
in a position paper that the judgment did not consider "fundamental facts" about the Nigerian inhabitants of the
territory, whose "ancestral homes" the ICJ has now adjudged to be in Cameroonian territory.
According to the text, the "mixed commission," which would be chaired by Mr Annan's Special Representative, Ahmedou
Ould-Adballah, would consider all the implications of the ICJ's 10 October decision, including the need to protect
the rights of the affected populations in both countries.
The body also would be entrusted with the task of demarcating the land boundary between the two countries and make
recommendations on additional confidence-building measures, such as the holding of regular meetings between local
authorities, Government officials and Heads of State.
Such measures would also include the development of joint venture projects, avoidance of inflammatory statements on
Bakassi, troop withdrawals along the land boundary, demilitarisation of the peninsula and the reactivation of the
Lake Chad Basin Commission. The commission would meet in the two countries' capitals, Abuja and Yaounde, on an
alternating basis, starting with Yaounde on 1 December, the communiqué said.
