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@ceonha3chang: Áo ôm #ceonha3chang #phoidoxinh #thoitrangnu #viral #xh
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Saturday 04 July 2026 05:19:05 GMT
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#karanlekibirjabshe #gidirkaranle
خپل زان خیال ساتل 💔💔💔😔😔😔😔😔❣️❣️❣️🥀🥀🥀🙏🙏#reman12345khan❣️❣️❣️❣️ #foryou_page #trendingvedio #pleasefollowmytiktok🙏🙏😔 #pleaseunfrezzemyaccount @Mohammad Salman @❣️❣️ابوحسان زما زڑگئ دئ ❣️❣️ @☠️(..UsMaN JaNi..)☠️ @❤️شیخ ابواحسان اسحاق سواتی🌹🌹
Nhỏ nhưng có võ #nerman #sapkhumui #kairos #xuhuong #viraltiktok
#creatorsearchinsights The handover of the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon was the result of a long-standing international border dispute rooted in colonial treaties, resolved primarily through the 2002 International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling in favor of Cameroon, followed by diplomatic agreements and Nigeria’s eventual compliance Bakassi is a resource-rich peninsula in the Gulf of Guinea, between the Cross River estuary (near Calabar, Nigeria) and the Rio del Rey estuary. It covers about 665 km² of low-lying mangrove islands and is strategically located where ocean currents create rich fishing grounds. While often called “oil-rich,” commercially viable onshore deposits have been limited, though offshore potential and fisheries have driven interest Colonial Origins of the Dispute The roots trace to the late 19th and early 20th centuries during the Scramble for Africa. In 1884, Britain signed a Treaty of Protection with the kings and chiefs of Old Calabar (Akwa Akpa), bringing the area, including Bakassi, under British influence and later administration as part of Nigeria Subsequent Anglo-German agreements defined spheres of influence. Cameroon was under German control, Nigeria under British. Key instruments included exchanges of notes in 1885–1886 and the 1913 Anglo-German Treaty, which placed Bakassi on the German (Cameroonian) side of the boundary After World War I, German Cameroon was divided: the larger part became French Cameroun, and the western portion (British Cameroons) was administered by Britain. In 1961, a UN plebiscite led Southern British Cameroons to join the Republic of Cameroon, while Northern British Cameroons joined Nigeria. However, the precise land and maritime boundaries, particularly around Bakassi, remained unclear. Nigeria administered Bakassi de facto for decades, with many inhabitants from Efik, Oron, and other Cross River/Akwa Ibom ethnic groups considering themselves Nigerian. Cameroon maintained that colonial treaties, especially the 1913 agreement, gave it sovereignty Post-Independence Tensions and Escalation After independence (Nigeria in 1960, Cameroon in 1960/1961), the border was not fully demarcated. In the early 1960s, Nigeria reportedly acknowledged that Bakassi was historically part of its core territory and claimed effective occupation and historic ties via the 1884 treaty Tensions rose in the 1970s. Nigerian leader Yakubu Gowon signed the Maroua Declaration in 1975 with Cameroonian President Ahmadou Ahidjo, which Cameroon viewed as accepting the boundary favoring it. Gowon’s successor, Murtala Mohammed, accepted this, and it was ratified by Nigeria. Discovery of potential oil and gas resources in the 1980s–1990s intensified the conflict. Armed clashes occurred in 1981 (killing Nigerian soldiers), 1987, and the early 1990s around Lake Chad and Bakassi. In 1993–1994, Nigerian forces occupied parts of the peninsula amid incidents involving villages and fishing areas. Cameroon accused Nigeria of aggression; Nigeria cited protection of its citizens In March 1994, Cameroon filed a case at the ICJ, seeking determination of sovereignty over Bakassi and the full land/maritime boundary. This avoided full-scale war while internationalizing the issue The ICJ Ruling (2002) The ICJ examined over a century of treaties, maps, and diplomatic correspondence. On October 10, 2002, it ruled overwhelmingly in Cameroon’s favor on Bakassi: • Sovereignty over the peninsula belongs to Cameroon, based primarily on the 1913 Anglo-German Agreement. • The boundary follows the thalweg of the Akwayafe River. • Nigeria must withdraw its forces and administration. The Court emphasized uti possidetis juris (respect for colonial boundaries) and the validity of the 1913 treaty. It rejected Nigerian appeal
#fyp #explore #foryou #الشعب_الصيني_ماله_حل😂😂 #ترند
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