Cameroon’s Minister of Territorial Administration, Paul Atanga Nji, has called on the country’s ten regional governors to ensure rigorous implementation of recommendations adopted during the second-semester Governors’ Conference held on 25–26 November in Yaoundé.
The directive forms part of the government’s broader push to reinforce governance, improve public administration, and enhance state presence across the national territory.
Key measures include strengthening predictive intelligence gathering, securing major road networks, and deploying tighter security across urban centres, rural communities, and border zones. Governors were also urged to intensify the fight against terrorism, drug trafficking, and urban disorder—issues that remain central to Cameroon’s internal security agenda.
The recommendations further call for stricter supervision of political parties, NGOs, associations, motorcycle-taxi groups, and transport unions. Atanga Nji emphasized that accelerating major development projects is essential to sustaining economic momentum and responding to the government’s long-term vision.
The Minister described timely reporting, discipline, and inter-institutional coordination as fundamental to safeguarding national stability and promoting good governance across all regions.






















