YAOUNDÉ,
Cameroon
Cameroon's 91-year-old president, Paul Biya, is in good health, the government said on Tuesday in a statement, calling widespread reports saying otherwise "pure fantasy."
Biya has not been seen in public since attending a China-Africa forum
in Beijing in early September. His failure to appear as scheduled at a summit
in France last weekend stoked speculation that the nonagenarian was unwell.
"Rumours
of all kinds have been circulating through the conventional media and social
networks about the president's condition," government spokesperson Rene
Sadi said in the statement. "The Government unequivocally states that
these rumours are pure fantasy ... and hereby issues a formal denial."
Opposition
parties and civil society groups have been calling for an update on the status
of Biya's health and his exact whereabouts.
After Beijing, Biya paid a private visit to Europe, Sadi said.
"The head of state is in good health and will be returning to Cameroon in
the coming days."
With
no clear succession plan, Biya's death would bring more political turmoil to
West and Central Africa, which has seen eight coups since 2020 and several
other military attempts to overthrow governments.
His
recent absence from the meeting of leaders from French-speaking countries in
Paris was much remarked on at the two-day event, according to three
non-Cameroonian African ministers who attended.
"He's
over 90, he hasn't been involved in day-to-day business for a long time, but if
he dies, the situation is likely to get out of hand," said one of the
ministers, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"No
one has prepared for the aftermath. We don't know what Cameroon (would) be like
without Paul Biya."
Cocoa
and oil-producing Cameroon, which has had just two presidents since
independence from France and Britain in the early 1960s, is in the grips of a
secessionist war that has killed thousands and a violent Boko Haram insurgency
in the north.
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