Open medium for the sharing and fostering of opinions related to culture, socio-politics,entertainment, news and more, from a Cameroonian, African and Global perspective.
Go to the "Echo Forum" @ http://www.cameroonechoes.org/echo-forum/#/ and sign in with your facebook, yahoo, twitter, gmail password and username and start participating in the forum. Want to cover the world cup? Write to Cameroon Echoes at cameroonechoes@yahoo.com so we can give you your own blog to post youtube vids and more. Please enjoy the new site and help promote us.
We want to sincerely thank all the readers who have constantly visited this site time and again. There is a saying that goes " Under the sublime law of progress, the present outgrows the past." Thus we have outgrown our current site. We have toiled hard to come up with a way to serve information to you. So if you feel this site has not been constantly updated for the past weeks, it is because we have been hard at work, building something more fabulous. Please go to http://www.cameroonechoes.org/ to see the beautiful site we have for you. This site won't last long as we will be redirecting it quite soon.
The site is still under construction but we just want to give you heads up so you can spread the word for us. Take the time to explore it. Send articles to cameroonechoes@yahoo.com if you want us to publish something for you. Better yet, read our submission tab for details.
Diamonds are symbols of wealth, elegance and love around the world. But in several African nations, they have been a means to power, a reason to terrorize millions of innocent civilians, and may have even helped finance some of the world’s most brutal terrorists. The human cost of the illicit global diamond trade is examined in the provocative documentary.
When white women flock to Jamaica for a little fun in the sun, the R&R they’re often looking for is not “Rest and Relaxation” but to “Rent a Rasta” according to director J. Michael Seyfert. His eye-opening expose’ of the same name sheds light on a barely acknowledged form of sex tourism, namely, white women who visit the Caribbean Islands to get their groove back with the help of black locals. This documentary claims that, each year, as many as 80,000 females from a variety of relatively-wealthy Western nations descend on Jamaica alone.
The president of the poverty-ravaged African state of Gabon has been slammed for spending $123million on a lavish townhouse in Paris.
Ali-Ben Bongo Ondimba, 51, has bought a sprawling 48,000 sq ft mansion on an acre of land in the heart of the French capital.
The 14-bedroom property on the upmarket rue de l'Universite also includes a heated swimming pool, jacuzzi, seven parking spaces and a tennis court.
In Gabon - where the average income is just $17 a day - most families live in one-room shacks.
Although the west African state is one of the continent's more prosperous nations due to its oil reserves, most of the population still live in poverty.
Gabon's opposition website, Bongo Must Quit, said: 'The president has squandered tens of millions by claiming this new mansion will serve to reduce the hotel costs for Ali-Ben Bongo and his official delegations.
PARIS (AP)—Cameroon striker Samuel Eto’o is so angry at criticism by former great Roger Milla that he is threatening to walk out on his teammates before the World Cup.
Milla, who thrilled fans with some dazzling goals and quirky celebrations in helping Cameroon reach the 1990 World Cup quarterfinals, claimed Eto’o “still hasn’t brought anything to our national team” when meeting reporters Friday.
Senegalese singer YOUSSOU N’DOUR explores Africa’s enduring musical legacy from its historical roots in the slave trade, to its far reach across the globe in RETURN TO GOREE.
With renowned jazz pianist MONCEF GENOUD, their journey takes them from the Goree trading post, where African slaves were processed on to ships bound for the Americas, to Atlanta, New Orleans, New York City and finally Luxembourg. Revealing the history of jazz, the rich legacy of their ancestors and the influence on the cultures they became part of.
A South African opera singer chosen by Nelson Mandela to perform at the World Cup opening ceremony has died from meningitis, his record label has said.
Siphiwo Ntshebe, 34, was admitted to hospital in Port Elizabeth last week and died on Tuesday, Epic Records said.
He was due to perform his new track Hope at the opening ceremony in Johannesburg on June 11.
Epic boss Nick Raphael said Ntshebe’s death was “a tragedy for all those who believe in the power of music”.
Just when the dust razed by the Tiko market fire disaster was settled and the tears on the cheeks of the victims was drying up and the traders still to get used to the new market situation, the Tiko council is up with their market tolls.
On re-introducing the old daily market sales ticket of FCFA 100 recently, the women around the St. Joseph Catholic Church area stood up like one woman and resisted the tax move with outright confronted with the tax collectors.
Recent Comments