CERAC’s Added Value To The Population

The association’s invaluable actions towards former leprosy patients, rural women, disabled persons and other vulnerable groups have changed the lives of many people.

Within the framework of its humanitarian actions and in order to take an active part in the development of the country by delivering much-needed assistance to the most vulnerable groups, the Circle of Friends of Cameroon (CERAC), created by the First Lady of Cameroon in 1995, has been working throughout the country, paying visits to patients, building schools to ensure the education of young Cameroonians, donating to various hospitals and schools. Such actions have not only improved and added the value of people living especially in the rural areas but have also shown the extent to which CERAC is working for the interest of Cameroonians, particularly the most vulnerable.

From Nkolbisson in the Mfoundi Division of the Centre Region to Bipindi, Kribi, Mvengue and Lolodorf in the South Region, to Batouri in the Kadey Division of the East Region, Ngan-ha in the Adamawa Region to Bangourain in the West Region passing through Deido in the Littoral Region to Muea in the South West Region, Menchum and Oku in the North West Region, the solidarity train of the Circle of Friends of Cameroon (CERAC) has toured all the ten Regions of the country on a crusade against misery, social exclusion, poverty, hun ger and illness inspired by its Founding President, First Lady, Mrs Chantal Biya, who is also UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for Education and Social Inclusion. CERAC’s presence in all the nooks and crannies of Cameroon has not just shown how humane and ordinary its members are but have left an undeniable transformation in the lives of the citizens.

For example, October 19, 2017 will remain a memorable date in the lives of inhabitants of the Nkolbisson neighbourhood in the outskirts of Yaounde as CERAC did not just revamp the Nkolbisson Government Bilingual School Complex but also offered gifts to 21 primary schools of the Yaounde VII Subdivision as well as Rural Women and Youths of Mfoundi Division, Centre Region. On the same note, students at the Okola High School in the Lékie Division of the Centre Region are still grateful to CERAC’s diplomatic wing for opening the school to the gate way of ICTs.

After 54 years of existence, with an advanced stage of decrepitude classroom buildings and a non-functional multimedia centre, the Okola High School, in the Lékie Division of the Centre Region was restored by the Diplomatic Wing of the Circle of Friends of Cameroon (CERAC), and handed to the educational community on July 4, 2018. The list is lon...

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