Al Jazeera Journalism Review

Supporters of opposition presidential candidate Issa Tchiroma, protest on the streets of Garoua, Cameroon, Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Welba Yamo Pascal)
Supporters of opposition presidential candidate Issa Tchiroma, protest on the streets of Garoua, Cameroon, Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Welba Yamo Pascal)

Polarised, Intimidated, Silenced: The Media Under Siege in Cameroon’s Election

Cameroon’s 2025 presidential election exposed a troubling paradox: a nation voting under the watchful eye of power, while its press remained silenced. From the arrest of a teenage reporter to bans on political debate and digital manipulation, freedom of expression is under siege, and journalism is on trial.

 

At just 18, Souga Tsogo Gabrielle never imagined she would end up in detention when she went to cover pre-election litigations at Cameroon’s Constitutional Council on 4 August 2025.

The young journalist, interning with a local newspaper, was arrested after receiving a photo of the Council building via WhatsApp to help her locate it. Police accused her of taking the photo herself, confiscated her phone, and detained her. “The police concluded that I had taken the picture, and that’s why I was arrested,” she told AJR duing a telephone interview.

Her time in a criminal cell with men, the fingerprinting and mugshots, and the fear that grew as night fell were profoundly distressing. Gabrielle was released after 24 hours following pressure from journalists’ professional associations. “It’s thanks to media pressure that I was released,” she added.

Gabrielle’s arrest and brief detention reflect a deeper, long-standing problem within Cameroon’s media landscape, particularly during election periods. Twelve candidates, including long-time president Paul Biya, who has been in power for over four decades, contested the vote, which Biya ultimately won, extending his mandate until 2032.

 

Journalist Intimidation and Crackdown on Free Speech

In late 2024, the government of Cameroon banned all reporting on President Paul Biya’s health, describing it as a national security matter. This was one of several restrictions leading up to the presidential election of 12 October 2025.

Ahead of the vote, journalists faced tight accreditation rules. They were required to hold a valid press card, prove they had not been sanctioned by the National Communication Council (NCC), show that their media outlet was legally registered, and secure accreditation from both the Ministry of Communication and the elections authority. Observers saw these measures as an attempt to silence independent journalists.

In a similar move, the NCC banned political debates on television and radio throughout the campaign period, from 27 September to 11 October 2025. Cameroonian journalist Jude Mbaku criticised the decision in an open letter to NCC boss, Joseph Chebonkeng, writing: “How does the NCC intend to reconcile this suspension with the constitutional duty of the press to inform, educate, and sensitise the electorate without fear or favour?”

The NCC had issued a similar ban before the 2018 general elections, citing fears that open debates could provoke political conflict. According to Ann Nabila, a journalist with Equinox TV, such actions by the Council simply “cause some journalists to shrink.”

Viban Jude, President of the Cameroon Association of English-Speaking Journalists (CAMASEJ), understands the difficult and often murky terrain journalists navigate in Cameroon, especially during election periods. He says the association before the 0ctober polls, organised trainings to equip journalists with skills in election reporting and safety measures during such times. To him, “No story is worth a journalist’s life.”

In August 2025, government forces raided a private television station in Douala that was airing a pre-recorded programme featuring opposition figure Dieudonné Yebga, ordering it off the air without explanation. Similar incidents occurred in 2024, with journalists reporting assaults and intimidation by law enforcement, particularly against those who criticised the 92-year-old president

The pressure on the media during election periods in Cameroon is far from new. Veteran journalist Charlie Ndi Nchia recalls facing it as far back as 1992, when Cameroon held its first democratic elections. He remembers the “huge risks” and “great courage” shown by journalists covering what he called a “farce” of an election.

Despite the deliberate obstacles set by the Biya regime, Ndi Nchia said, “the media did its utmost best.” The personal cost, however, was severe. He was advised to “disappear,” prompting him to flee into self-exile in Nigeria.

Reflecting on his long career, Ndi Nchia draws comparisons between the Biya era and that of Ahmadou Ahidjo, Cameroon’s first president. Under Ahidjo, he says, journalists were imprisoned but “hardly killed.”

“In fact, Ahidjo was known to invite stubborn journalists for face-to-face confrontations, none of whom were known to have been locked up or made to disappear afterward,” he recalled. He contrasts this with the Biya regime, which he says, “inherited and intensified practices like pre-publication censorship,” creating a far more dangerous environment for the press.

 

The Enduring Grip on Media and Asymmetry in Media Coverage of Candidates

Cameroon’s media landscape is far from a level playing field. State-controlled outlets such as Cameroon Radio Television (CRTV) and the daily newspaper, CameroonTribune continue to enjoy preferential treatment: from privileged access to government information to steady financial support. In stark contrast, independent media that struggle to survive, operating with scarce resources and facing constant political and financial pressures.

While Biya consistently enjoys generous airtime and favourable coverage across most media outlets before, during and even after the 2025 presidential elections, money also plays a role. A leading English-language newspaper publisher, who requested anonymity, admitted that financial influence often determines coverage. “I have salaries to pay,” he said candidly. “When Biya’s party offers financial support, it’s hard to turn it down. Sometimes you do it reluctantly, but you do it.”

Nabila agrees, adding that “the ethical dilemmas that arise from economic hardship make journalists vulnerable to political manipulation especially during elections periods.”

 

Newspapers prominently feature the incumbent, Paul Biya or his party, CPDM, and, to some extent, the opposition leader, Tchiroma — particularly when he makes headline-grabbing statements.
Newspapers prominently feature the incumbent, Paul Biya or his party, CPDM, and, to some extent, the opposition leader, Tchiroma, particularly when he makes headline-grabbing statements.

 

 

Even with this bias, some argue that opposition parties share part of the blame. Njodzeka Danhatou, producer of Road to Etoudi on Mimi Mefo Info, an online programme that offered every presidential candidate a platform, says many opposition teams fail to engage. “We reached out to all 12 candidates for the 2025 elections,” he explained. “Only seven responded, and some ignored official invitations altogether.”

He added that gathering information about opposition candidates is often difficult. “Most of them don’t even have updated online platforms,” he told AJR in a telephone interview, reflecting on the communication gap that continues to disadvantage them in Cameroon’s tightly controlled media space.

 

A Divided and Polarised Press

Cameroon’s media once again revealed its deep divisions and polarisation before, during, and after the 2025 presidential elections. The country boasts more than 600 newspapers, 200 radio stations, and over 60 television channels, yet unity in journalistic integrity remains elusive according to Danhatou “Several media houses clearly took sides during the elections,” said journalist  Danhatou. In July, for instance, three newspapers ran almost identical front-page headlines branding opposition candidate Maurice Kamto a “fascist” and a “gangster,”  in what appeared to be a coordinated smear campaign. Kamto, who was ultimately barred from contesting, had finished second in the 2018 elections and was widely seen as Biya’s strongest challenger.

French language newspapers run almost the same headlines calling Cameroon's leading opposition leader, fascist and gangster
French-language newspapers run almost the same headlines, calling Cameroon's leading opposition leader a 'fascist' and 'gangster'.

 

“There are some hardcore opposition media outlets that will hardly ever say anything positive about the ruling party — just as some pro-government outlets will never criticise it,” Danhatou observed.

Before the vote, the state broadcaster CRTV ran an online poll asking Cameroonians to choose their preferred presidential candidate. However, the poll was abruptly deleted after Biya’s main rival, Issa Tchiroma Bakary, took a significant lead.

Mimi Mefo Info calls out CRTV for removing a poll that showed Tchiroma in a strong lead.
Mimi Mefo Info calls out CRTV for removing a poll that showed Tchiroma in a strong lead.

 

After the elections, the bias only deepened. Many media outlets according to Danhatou projected winners not based on official data but according to their political sympathies. Some proclaimed Tchiroma the victor, while others confidently declared Biya had won, all claiming to rely on “trends” from polling stations.

When Tchiroma prematurely announced himself as president-elect, reactions from the press mirrored the country’s divide. Some outlets, went as far as referring to him as the “president-elect” even before official results were published, a move that once again brought to the fore the blurring line between journalism and partisanship in Cameroon’s media landscape.

In the 1992 presidential election, the press appeared to agree that opposition leader Ni John Fru Ndi had won — even though the official results, released amid allegations of rigging, suggested otherwise.
In the 1992 presidential election, the press appeared to agree that opposition leader Ni John Fru Ndi had won, even though the official results, released amid allegations of rigging, suggested otherwise.

 

AI, Social Media, Misinformation and Disinformation

Nearly all 12 candidates used social mdia to engage with voters. However, the incumbent president went a step further by employing artificial intelligence: his campaign video was AI-generated, sparking widespread criticism from Cameroonians. Many argued that the video was misleading and intended to conceal the failures of Biya’s government.

Due to the speed at which information circulated online, Danhatou observed that it became increasingly difficult to distinguish fact from falsehood, opening the floodgates to misinformation and disinformation.

Henry Ekpele Mekole, author of Social Media and Electoral Law Violation in Cameroon: The Case of the 2018 Presidential Election, sees social media as a “double-edged sword,” especially for journalists who depend on it for news. “Some fake accounts are created by foreign entities to influence our elections,” he told AJR, stressing the need for journalists to thoroughly fact-check any information they obtain from social media.

In his research, Mekole notes that social media was used to violate Cameroon’s electoral laws before, during, and after the 2018 presidential election. Although the law stipulates that results should only be declared by the Constitutional Council within 15 days after polling, numerous bloggers and social media users prematurely announced their own “winners,” setting the stage for potential post-election unrest.

“We were misled twice by social media,” says Danhatou, adding that the impact could have been worse if not for his media organisation’s rigorous fact-checking efforts.

A social media user from the town of Buea, who requested anonymity, admitted: “I shared updates from various polling stations on several WhatsApp groups”. “I only shared the ones” he continued “that favoured the candidate I supported. I didn’t verify whether they were true or false, after all, everyone else was sharing election trends too.”

N’zui Manto, an activist, and Bruno François, a journalist, are among the most polarising voices on social media in Cameroon. With massive followings, their posts often ignite  heated online battle of opinions across the country.
N’zui Manto, an activist, and Bruno François, a journalist, are among the most polarising voices on social media in Cameroon. With massive followings, their posts often ignite heated online battles of opinions across the country.

 

Following the disputed 2018 presidential elections, social media also became a breeding ground for tribal hate, with supporters of the two main candidates using it to spread hostility. The same pattern now appears to be resurfacing in 2025. While social media has been a powerful tool during Cameroon’s presidential election, it has also been a casualty. The government imposed internet shutdowns and deliberately slowed down bandwidth, disrupting access to social media, a practice that drew widespread condemnation both at home and abroad.

 

The polarisation of Cameroon’s media, the tightening grip of the state, and the digital chaos fuelled by misinformation together paint a worrying picture of democracy under strain. The 2025 elections showed that journalism in Cameroon remains both a battleground and a mirror, reflecting the country’s political fractures and testing its democratic resolve. The question that remains is whether the next generation of journalists, like Gabrielle, will inherit a media environment ruled by fear or one finally guided by freedom and fairness.

 

 

Related Articles

‘Not an easy ride’ - the long and winding road to digital journalism in Cameroon

How do you mark yourself as a professional reporter in Cameroon when everyone has a Facebook page and claims to be a ‘journalist’?

Akem
Akem Nkwain Published on: 23 Mar, 2022
Caught between warring factions - life as a journalist in Cameroon

Cameroon’s anglophone crisis has resulted in large parts of the country becoming no-go zones for reporters who must find other ways to do their jobs

Akem
Akem Nkwain Published on: 8 Jun, 2022
‘I had to work for free’ - life as a disabled journalist in Cameroon

Working as a journalist is not easy for people with disabilities in Cameroon - many of whom are forced to work as volunteers for years to ‘prove’ themselves able to do the job

Akem
Akem Nkwain Published on: 25 Aug, 2022
‘Other journalists jeer at us’ – life for mobile journalists in Cameroon

Journalists in Cameroon are using their phones in innovative ways to report the news for many different types of media, but major news organisations have still not caught up

Akem
Akem Nkwain Published on: 1 Aug, 2023
Cameroonian Media Martyrs: The Intersection of Journalism and Activism

Experts and journalists in Cameroon disagree on the relationship between journalism and activism: some say journalism is activism; others think they are worlds apart, while another category says a “very thin” line separate both

Nalova Akua
Nalova Akua Published on: 28 Jan, 2024
Journalism in chains in Cameroon

Investigative journalists in Cameroon sometimes use treacherous means to navigate the numerous challenges that hamper the practice of their profession: the absence of the Freedom of Information Act, the criminalisation of press offenses, and the scare of the overly-broad anti-terrorism law.

Nalova Akua
Nalova Akua Published on: 12 Apr, 2024
Challenges for Female Journalists in Crisis Zones of Cameroon

Testimonies of what female journalists in Cameroon are facing and how they are challenging these difficulties.

Akem
Akem Nkwain Published on: 30 Jul, 2024
'If women are dying as a result of it, then I should report about it' - telling the untold stories of Cameroon

Journalists like Comfort Mussa, based in Cameroon, say that seeking out the untold stories of real people and having the bravery to cover taboo subjects are essential to their work

Akem
Akem Nkwain Published on: 3 Oct, 2022
Cameroonian Journalists at the Center of Fighting Illegal Fishing

While the EU’s red card to Cameroon has undeniably tarnished its image, it has paradoxically unlocked the potential of Cameroonian journalists and ignited a movement poised to reshape the future. Through this shared struggle, journalists, scientists, conservationists, storytellers, and government officials have united, paving the way for a new era of ocean advocacy.

Shuimo Trust Dohyee
Shuimo Trust Dohyee Published on: 21 Aug, 2024

More Articles

Investigating the Assassination of My Own Father

As a journalist, reporting on the murder of my father meant answering questions about my own position as an objective observer.

Diana López Zuleta
Diana López Zuleta Published on: 16 Jan, 2026
Reporting Under Fire: The Struggle of African Journalists Facing Intimidation

African journalists who expose corruption and power now face a brutal mix of arrests, torture, digital surveillance, and lawsuits meant to drain their resources and silence them. From Ethiopia, Nigeria, Malawi, Benin, Sudan, Uganda, and Kenya to exile in Canada, reporting the truth has become an act of personal survival as much as public service.

Nigerian freelance Journalist John Chukwu
John Chukwu Published on: 4 Dec, 2025
Shipwrecked Narratives: How to Keep Migration Stories Afloat

Migration stories don’t become real until you meet people in the journey: the carpenter carrying photos of his fantasy coffins, or the Libyan city worker burying the forgotten dead, or the Tatar woman watching her livelihood collapse at a militarised border. Following these surprising human threads is the only way journalism can cut through collective exhaustion and make readers confront a crisis they’ve been trained to ignore.

Karlos Zurutuza, a freelance journalist and a media trainer. His work has been published in The Guardian, Al Jazeera English, POLITICO, The Middle East Eye and The Independent, among others.
Karlos Zurutuza Published on: 30 Nov, 2025
What It Means to Be an Investigative Journalist Today

A few weeks ago, Carla Bruni, wife of former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, was seen removing the Mediapart logo from view. The moment became a symbol of a major victory for investigative journalism, after the platform exposed Gaddafi’s financing of Sarkozy’s election campaign, leading to his prison conviction. In this article, Edwy Plenel, founder of Mediapart and one of the most prominent figures in global investigative journalism, reflects on a central question: what does it mean to be an investigative journalist today?

Edwy Plenel
Edwy Plenel Published on: 27 Nov, 2025
A Sudanese Journalist in the Grip of the Rapid Support Forces

She was arrested, tortured, nearly raped, threatened with death, and subjected to degrading abuse. Her brother was brutally mistreated in an effort to locate her. In the end, her family had to pay a ransom to secure her release. She sought refuge abroad, but eventually returned to Sudan to continue documenting the war’s toll, particularly in El Fasher, a city now under siege. This is the harrowing account of a Sudanese journalist detained and tortured by the Rapid Support Forces.

Empty screen
Sudanese Female Journalist Published on: 3 Nov, 2025
Zapatismo and Citizen Journalism in Chiapas, Mexico

In Chiapas, independent journalists risk their lives to document resistance, preserve Indigenous memory, and challenge state and cartel violence. From Zapatista films to grassroots radio, media becomes a weapon for dignity, truth, and survival.

Ana Maria Monjardino
Ana Maria Monjardino Published on: 26 Oct, 2025
Journalists Under Occupation; Palestinian Journalists in the West Bank

Palestinian journalists in the West Bank face extreme physical danger, psychological trauma, and systemic targeting under Israeli occupation, yet continue to report with resilience, amplifying the voices of their people despite global indifference and media bias.

Synne Furnes Bjerkestrand
Synne Bjerkestrand Published on: 13 Oct, 2025
The Silent Death of Urdu Newspapers in India

With a 200-year history, Urdu newspapers in India are now facing a silent death—trapped in a cycle of decline where circulation has fallen by nearly 25%, advertising is absent, and government support is scarce. What vanishes is more than print: it is the erosion of a cultural and political lifeline that once bound Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs in common debates and carried the voices of the marginalised into India’s public sphere.

Hanan Zaffa
Hanan Zaffar, Majid Alam Published on: 1 Oct, 2025
Why Are Young Journalists in Kashmir Quitting Before They Begin?

In Kashmir, mounting censorship, political pressure, and shrinking job prospects are forcing a generation of aspiring journalists to abandon the profession, many before they even get the chance to begin, leaving behind a media landscape stripped of dissent, debate, and independent voices.

Abrar Fayaz, Muqeet Mohammed Shah Published on: 23 Sep, 2025
Sudan’s Journalists Are Being Silenced: By Bullets, Exile, and Fear

The collapse of the media industry in Sudan has subjected journalists to physical threats, legal and professional challenges, with no functioning legal system to investigate crimes committed against the press.

Nalova Akua
Nalova Akua Published on: 17 Sep, 2025
Nepali Journalists Trapped Between “GenZ” Protest and State Crackdowns

Nepali journalists are under attack on two fronts: facing violence from protesters in the streets while also being targeted by government crackdowns, restrictive laws, and political interference that threaten press freedom.

Sumaiya Ali
Sumaiya Ali Published on: 12 Sep, 2025
I Don’t Want You to Be a Journalist, Mama”. Do Gaza’s Journalists Have the Luxury of Absence?

Does the Palestinian journalist in Gaza have the freedom to simply “step away”? How do they navigate the balance between their professional responsibilities and their family life? And to what extent does the duty to report justify the personal cost of being separated from one’s loved ones? Journalist Jenin Al-Wadiya sheds light on the deeply human details that rarely make it to the screen.

Jenin Al-Wadiya
Jenin Al-Wadiya Published on: 31 Aug, 2025
Intersections of Journalism and Social Sciences in the Field

The field is where journalism and the social sciences meet at their most dynamic edge. As the world grows more complex, journalists increasingly take on the role of sociologists, without abandoning their core mission to question power and expose uncomfortable truths. By drawing on the methods and insights of social science, journalism deepens its coverage, grounds stories in real-world contexts, and resists the temptation of surface-level narratives.

Mohammed Ahddad
Ahdad Mohamed Published on: 23 Aug, 2025
New Media Reforms in Bangladesh Introduced to Replace Hasina-Era Journalism

Bangladesh’s interim government, led by Muhammad Yunus, has launched ambitious media reforms to undo the legacy of Sheikh Hasina’s 15-year rule, which was marked by censorship, media monopolies, and the notorious Digital Security Act. However, despite promises of greater freedom, journalists remain wary, as self-censorship, restrictive laws, and public scepticism continue to cast doubt on genuine change.

Sumaiya Ali
Sumaiya Ali Published on: 17 Aug, 2025
Canadian Journalists for Justice in Palestine: A Call to Name the Killer, Not Just the Crime

How many journalists have to be killed before we name the killer? What does press freedom mean if it excludes Palestinians? In its latest strike, Israel killed an entire Al Jazeera news crew in Gaza—part of a systematic campaign to silence the last witnesses to its crimes. Canadian Journalists for Justice in Palestine (CJJP) condemns this massacre and calls on the Canadian government to end its complicity, uphold international law, and demand full accountability. This is not collateral damage. This is the targeted erasure of truth.

Samira Mohyeddin
Samira Mohyeddin Published on: 14 Aug, 2025
Monitoring of Journalistic Malpractices in Gaza Coverage

On this page, the editorial team of the Al Jazeera Journalism Review will collect news published by media institutions about the current war on Gaza that involves disinformation, bias, or professional journalistic standards and its code of ethics.

A picture of the Al Jazeera Media Institute's logo, on a white background.
Al Jazeera Journalism Review Published on: 11 Aug, 2025
Anas Al Sharif; Killed by Israel, but His Final Words Will Echo far Beyond His Death

For over a year and a half, Anas Jamal al-Sharif refused to leave northern Gaza, documenting the destruction and loss that others tried to hide. Tonight, Israel silenced his voice, but his final words, written on April 6, will echo far beyond his death.

Al Jazeera Journalism Review
Al Jazeera Journalism Review Published on: 11 Aug, 2025
The Human Story in Gaza: The Deadly Dilemma of “Who Do We Tell About?”

In the accelerating context of genocide, is the “pace” of death in Gaza outstripping journalists’ ability to capture human stories? How can they be expected to take their time crafting narratives amid hunger, displacement, and death? And to what extent can postwar documentation hold journalistic value in preserving collective memory and pursuing accountability for the perpetrators?

Mirvat Ouf
Mirvat Ouf Published on: 3 Aug, 2025
The Battle to Keep Journalists Alive in Gaza

Hungry journalists covering the story of starvation in Gaza, surviving on salt to stay alive, selling their work equipment to secure a “sack of flour” for their children, shedding the “shame” of publicly asking for food, and enduring the harshest media environment just to maintain “continuous coverage”.

Mona Khodor
Mona Khodor Published on: 26 Jul, 2025
Balancing Productivity and Privacy: How Female Journalists Use AI Chatbots

Female journalists in Jordan are harnessing AI chatbots to boost productivity, enhance digital safety, and find emotional support, but their growing reliance also raises critical concerns about privacy, ethics, and the responsible use of emerging technologies in journalism. This article explores how these tools are reshaping their workflows while navigating the challenges of trust and accountability.

Afnan Abu Yahia
Afnan Abu Yahia Published on: 20 Jul, 2025
In the War on Gaza: How Do You Tell a Human Story?

After nine months of genocidal war on Palestine, how can journalists tell human stories? Which stories should they focus on? And does the daily, continuous coverage of the war’s developments lead to a “normalisation of death”?

Yousef Fares
Yousef Fares Published on: 8 Jul, 2025
How Much AI is Too Much AI for Ethical Journalism

As artificial intelligence transforms newsrooms across South Asia, journalists grapple with the fine line between enhancement and dependency

Saurabh Sharma
Saurabh Sharma Published on: 1 Jul, 2025
How to Tell the Stories of Gaza’s Children

Where does compassion end and journalism begin? How can one engage with children ethically, and is it even morally acceptable to conduct interviews with them? Palestinian journalist Reem Al-Qatawy offers a profoundly different approach to human-interest reporting. At the Hope Institute in Gaza, she met children enduring the harrowing aftermath of losing their families. Her experience was marked by intense professional and ethical challenges.

Rima Al-Qatawi
Rima Al-Qatawi Published on: 26 Jun, 2025
How Is Western Media Framing the Famine Catastrophe in the Gaza Strip?

Can the media subject the issue of famine in Palestine to so-called professional balance even after UN agencies and the International Court of Justice have acknowledged it? Why have many Western media outlets avoided precise legal and ethical terms such as “famine” or “starvation,” opting instead for vague expressions like “food shortage” or “nutrition crisis”? Doesn’t this practice reflect a clear bias in favor of the Israeli narrative and serve to justify the policy of “systematic starvation”?

Fidaa Al-Qudra
Fidaa Al-Qudra Published on: 23 Jun, 2025