Cameroon opposition leader flees to Gambia for ‘safety’ after vote

Cameroon’s opposition figure Issa Tchiroma Bakary, who contests the outcome of his country’s October election that returned Paul Biya to power amid violent protests, has fled to The Gambia, the Gambian government said Sunday.

(FILES) Cameroon opposition figure Issa Tchiroma Bakary of the Front for the National Salvation of Cameroon (FNSC) casts his ballot in Garoua on October 12, 2025. Opposition leader Issa Tchiroma Bakary, who claims victory in the Cameroonian presidential election, asserted on October 31, 2025 that he is under the “protection” of a faction of the army and called for support through general strikes in the country, which has been rocked by unrest since Paul Biya’s re-election.
On October 27, 2025 President Paul Biya, 92, who has been in power since 1982 in this Central African nation, was re-elected for an eighth term. His contested re-election has created a climate of tension in Cameroon, as several cities across the country have since been rocked by demonstrations called for by candidate Tchiroma, which have been violently suppressed by the regime. (Photo by AFP)

 

The west African country said he had been allowed to enter the country on November 7 “on humanitarian grounds” and “for the purpose of ensuring his safety while discussions continue to pursue a peaceful and diplomatic resolution to the post-electoral tensions in Cameroon”.

Biya, who has been president of Cameroon for 43 years, was sworn in this month for an eighth term after an election that sparked mass protests and subsequent repression in which several demonstrators died.

The 92-year-old Biya, the world’s oldest head of state, won the vote with 53.7 percent of the vote, according to official results, against 35.2 percent for Tchiroma, a former government minister.

But Tchiroma has claimed he is the election’s real winner, saying “there are now two presidents — the president elected by the Cameroonian people (me) and the president appointed by the Constitutional Council (whom you know)”.

Tchiroma has repeatedly urged supporters to protest against the official election outcome.

After several people are reported to have died when security forces quashed opposition rallies just before and after Biya’s win, Tchiroma has urged supporters to stage “dead city” operations, closing shops and halting other public activities.

The government said it plans to initiate legal proceedings against him for his “repeated calls for insurrection.”

Biya is only the second person to lead Cameroon since independence from France in 1960.

He has ruled with an iron fist, repressing all political and armed opposition.