By Mbom Sixtus in
Yaounde
Volke Finke |
The secretary general of the party and member of
parliament, Robert Bapooh Lipot made the call in a press conference he granted
last week end. The press conference was organised to reaffirm the legality of
the ‘UPC Bapooh Lipot faction’ and present the party’s stand point on some
national issues.
The UPC, the political party that spearheaded the
fight for the independence of Cameroon is of the opinion that while the
government is drawing up proposals to solve problems in Cameroon’s football,
they should also be thinking about booting out the head coach, who they say,
holds a 70% responsibility for the poor performance of the country’s national
team at the FIFA 2014 World Cup in Brazil.
Bapooh Lipot mooted that though other factors might
have contributed to the debacle of the Indomitable Lions in Brazil, the main
reason is that the coach included over 10 players in the squad who he was well
aware, were suffering from injuries. According to him any honourable coach
would resign after getting the type of performance he put up in Brazi. He also
stated that the party considers Finke’s quest to take the team to the next
Africa Cup of nations to be an intolerable provocation.
The UPC secretary general also opined that if Finke
does not want to go out through the main door, then he should be pushed out
through the window. He told journalists that it is about time Cameroon revise
its strategy of recruiting coaches. He cautioned that the country should cease
from being a country where retired coaches run to, for easy money or a
laboratory where European coaches are sent to test their capacities.
Speaking about the main issue on the agenda, Lipot
stated that other factions of the UPC are claiming that they have the right to
broadcast messages on the CRTV political propaganda program, Expression Direct, whereas the
communication minister stated that the program is for parties that are
represented in parliament.
He reiterated government recognition of his party
which is represented in parliament.
“My team and I were elected in a general assembly of
the UPC on September 30, 2012. There has never been any appeal or complaint
filed at the interior ministry to contest the elections after we deposited the
report of the assembly. We went ahead, carried out campaigns and won seats in
the September 30, 2013 legislative elections. That gives us the recognition and
sole right to broadcast messages over the national station in the name of the
UPC,” Lipot said. He also noted that the messages will not be his or Pierre
Sende, another UPC MP, but a message of the party.
He accused divisional officers who give authorisations
to anybody who intends to organise a political rally in the name of the UPC for
scheming to kill the party. This he said, is because of the fact that no other
party is facing what the UPC is going through.
He praised the government for the progress on the
Kribi deep seaport, but stressed that the decisions taken by the state to
increase prices of fuel and cooking gas, as well as signing the economic
partnership agreement, EPA between Cameroon and the EU, requires a close follow
up. He said government has put the country in a corner where serious policies
need to be taken to withstand certain challenges especially within the
framework of the EPA.
He also saluted President Biya for the fight against
the Islamic terrorist group, Boko Haram, stating that the policy of the new UPC
is to either take over power or join the government and contribute to
development and growth; as was the school of thought of the late UPC SG,
Frederick Kodock.
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