By your grace: Bonzyz and Rinyu deliver Easter hymn “Njoh Weh”
What are you grateful for? Family? Friends? Work? Or simply the gift of life itself? These are the questions answered […]
What are you grateful for? Family? Friends? Work? Or simply the gift of life itself? These are the questions answered […]
“Seeing people whose body parts had been chopped off was painful at first, but you eventually become immune to it…”
This initiative aims to promote responsible journalism on mental health, reduce stigma, and amplify the voices of young reporters in Cameroon
I have seen cases where women return to work barely three weeks after giving birth because staying home longer means risking job loss.
“I worked until 24 hours before my expected delivery date, went straight to the hospital, and even then had to plead for my position to be secured,”
technology alone does not automatically produce trust, especially among first-time formal sector entrants who may already feel structurally distant from administrative systems.
Now that the 65-page CV is trending, there is no better time to turn the mirror on ourselves as Cameroonian journalists.
Many women working in informal or semi-formal settings have no guaranteed maternity leave, no income security, and no access to social protection
One reporter I never met but keep hearing about is Sylvanus Ezieh of The Guardian Post newspaper. Based on stories
A night meant to close the CAMASEJ AGM became a mirror, reflecting the discipline, tensions, humour, excesses, and quiet lessons of a profession that knows how to argue, organise, and celebrate in equal measure.