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Private security sector has played an important role in in the fight against insecurity and creating thousands of jobs in Cameroon. The legislative and regulatory framework for private security activities in Cameroon is quite extensive. Despite this legal framework, there are still more than one hundred companies in activity while only nine have presidential approval. Therefore, the sector is criticized for its regulatory framework and its lack of efficient implementation of sector regulations.
Main law regulating private security: DECREE NO. 2005/031 OF FEBRUARY 2, 2005
Key Information |
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Cameroon is not a participant to the Montreux Document. |
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Sector Size (2016) | Can PSC personnel carry firearms? No * Decree No. 2005/031, art. 23 |
International Code of Conduct Association (ICoCA)
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Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights
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The private security sector in Cameroon has been reported as having provided multiple positive effects. The sector was recognized as a significant support to public security forces in the fight against insecurity. It has also become a major employer in the country, contributing to lowering the unemployment rate by creating thousands of jobs.
Despite these positive effects, the private security sector in Cameroon suffers from major challenges. A large majority of PSCs operating in the country are not registered nor licenses, damaging the credibility of PSCs who do comply with regulations. The existence of PSCs outside the control of the government constitutes a major challenge for human rights in Cameroon in a context that includes various social tensions, terrorism, and insecurity.
Cameroun’s first law regulating private security, Law No. 97/021, was passed in 1977. Since then, the regulatory framework for PSCs in Cameroon has become rather restrictive, including various laws and decrees regulating PSC activities. Despite this legal framework, PSCs continue to operate in anonymity and outside the law.
A report by the civil society organisation ’Collectif camerounais des organisations des droits de l’homme et de la démocratie (COCODHD)’ identified various challenges confronting the private security sector in Cameroon, including but not limited to the following:
[i] Collectif camerounais des organisations des droits de l'homme et de la democratie (COCODHD), “Document d’information gouvernance des entreprises de la sécurité privée au Cameroun”, May 2019.
[ii] Moki Edwin Kindzeka, “Cameroon Clamps Down on Private Security Firms” VOA News, 16 September 2016.