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At least Four Cameroonian soldiers were killed by suspected separatists in a restive English-speaking region (Southern-Cameroon) early on Wednesday, government sources said.
"The Four soldiers were killed around 02:00 around Mamfe," a city in the country's Southwest Region, according to an army source.
The bloodshed is the latest episode in an escalating crisis in the Southwest and Northwest regions, home to a large minority of English-speakers in the francophone-majority nation.
Meanwhile," Eight members of the security forces have been killed this month alone.
Resentment among anglophones over perceived discrimination has fed a spiral of political demands and a crackdown, leading to calls for secession.
President Paul Biya fiercely opposes secession or a return to Cameroon's former federal structure.
The campaign against the separatists has led to night-time curfews, restrictions on movement, raids and body searches, as well as an attempt by the central government in Yaounde to reach out to the anglophone community for political dialogue.
According to the International monitors, in contrast, say at least 20 and possibly 40 people have been killed since late September.
English-speakers comprise about a fifth of the country's 22 million people, and often say they suffer from economic inequality and discrimination, especially in education and the legal system.
The anglophone presence in Cameroon is rooted in the colonial past of West Africa.
France and Britain divided up the former German colony under League of Nations mandates after World War I.
A year after the French-ruled territory became independent in 1961, the southern part of British Cameroons was integrated into a federal system.
That structure was scrapped 11 years later in favour of a "united republic".
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