Decentralisation: Experts Diagnose Challenges
By Victorine BIY-NFOR, Cameroon Tribune, 27-08-2013
Stakeholders
at a colloquium in Yaounde are seeking ways of overcoming
challenges.The decentralisation process in Cameroon is effective and in
spite of
drawbacks, the Minister Delegate in the Ministry of Territorial
Administration and Decentralisation in charge of Local Councils, says
that the future is bright.
Jules
Doret Ndongo was speaking on August 27, 2013 in Yaounde as he opened a
two-day colloquium on behalf of Minister Emmanuel René Sadi on
“Decentralisation and Local Development: Stakes and Prospects in
Cameroon,” organised by the Pan-African Institute for Development
(PAID).
Jules
Doret Ndongo explained that though 21 ministries have devolved powers to
local councils since 2010 when the process effectively began, the lack
of financing and human resources are to blame for the hitches in
implementing the process. “You can transfer some competences, but if the
human resources are not competent on the field, it will be difficult to
effectively execute activities. This means that we have to put in place
an organisation between the central and devolved services of the State
so that field delegates can really support local councils,” he pointed
out.
The
Minister Delegate explained that the problem of lack of funding was
being sorted out with the Ministry of Finance. The objectives, the
Minister said, was to improve the standards of living of Cameroonians by
pushing towards effective development through decentralisation.
The
Secretary General of PAID, Emmanuel Kamdem, reminded participants that
for two days, they will be dissecting challenges that rock the
decentralisation process but not without recommending how to move the
process forward. He said there was need to partner with networks and
institutions for the effective transfer of responsibilities to local
governments so as to move the country to economic emergence by 2035 as
wished by the Head of State, Paul Biya.
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