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Cabinet Meeting of 23 February 2017 - Press Release

Cameroun · Adoption : 23 février 2017

Pays
Cameroun
Type
Texte juridique
Date d'adoption
23 février 2017
Organisation
Services du Premier Ministre du Cameroun
RésuméLe Premier Ministre camerounais a présidé une réunion du Cabinet le 23 février 2017. Trois points ont été examinés : l'état civil (réforme, création du BUNEC), le service civique (Agence nationale du service civique) et le recensement général de la population et de l'habitat (4e RGPH). Des instructions ont été données pour réviser le décret de 1987 sur les centres d'état civil spéciaux et pour intensifier la sensibilisation au recensement.

The Prime Minister, Head of Government, H.E Philemon YANG, chaired an important Cabinet Meeting this Thursday 23 February 2017 at 9:00 a.m. in the Prime Minister’s Office.

Besides his close aides, the meeting was attended by the Vice-Prime Minister, Ministers of State, Ministers, Ministers-Delegate and Secretaries of State.

The following three items featured on the agenda:

  1. A statement by the Minister of Territorial Administration and Decentralization on “the achievements and prospects of the civil status reform in Cameroon”;
  2. A report of the Minister of Youth Affairs and Civic Education on “the effectiveness of the National Civic Service Agency for Participatory Development”;
  3. A report of the Minister Delegate at the Ministry of the Economy, Planning and Regional Development on “the progress of preparations towards the fourth general population and housing census”;

Taking the floor after opening remarks by the Prime Minister, Head of Government, the Minister of Territorial Administration and Decentralisation, stated that the civil status reform stems from a diagnosis which revealed a number of shortcomings relating especially to documentary fraud, haphazard conservation and archiving of civil status registers, as well as the indifference of people towards civil status events. To make up for these shortcomings, Government with the support of its development partners, set up the Cameroon Civil Status Rehabilitation Programme since 2010 consisting of five major components, namely: (i) data search and information collection with a view to designing a civil status map for Cameroon; (ii) reforming the judicial and institutional framework, by promulgating the Law of 6 May 2011 which introduced several innovations in the organisation and functioning of Cameroon’s civil status, some of which include the replacement of special civil status centres with secondary centres, the extension of deadlines for the declaration of birth and death that have moved from 30 to 90 days and especially, the establishment of the National Civil Status Bureau (BUNEC); (iii) sensitising and training all stakeholders involved; (iv) setting up a comprehensive investment programme and (v) building up a computerised and secured national civil status filing system.

With regard to prospects, the Minister of Territorial Administration and Decentralisation revealed that a number of actions are being considered to strengthen the ongoing reform. He thus announced the completion of the study on specific populations geared towards getting them registered on the civil status registers; matching the provisions of the 1987 Decree for the organisation and functioning of special civil status centres with the Law of 6 May 2011; integrating training modules on the civil status into the various levels of education.

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