May 14, 2025, Pinyin Santa, Mezam State, Northern Ambazonia Pinyin Massacre. In a brutal assault early Wednesday morning, the Cameroon Occupation Forces invaded the community of Pinyin Santa. The operation, which followed an attack at Ndapang Market, resulted in the deaths of more than a dozen innocent Ambazonia civilians. the Cameroon Occupation forces stormed the village with heavy weaponry, firing indiscriminately and setting homes ablaze.

Continue genocide and Atrocities
Pinyin Massacre This massacre mirrors a horrific event that occurred just two months earlier in the nearby village of Mamben. There, the Cameroon Occupation Forces forcibly removed thousands of Ambazonia young men and from a local bar and executed them en masse. The pattern is chillingly consistent: arbitrary killings, forced disappearances, and deliberate targeting of civilians—all carried out under military command.
War Crimes Under International Law
Pinyin Massacre Such acts clearly constitute war crimes under the Geneva Conventions and related International Laws. Targeting unarmed civilians during armed conflict violates the principles of distinction and proportionality, which prohibit attacks not directed at legitimate military targets. These massacres show deliberate intent to terrorize and punish communities seen as sympathetic to the Ambazonia self-determination movement.
Violation of Human Rights
Beyond war crimes, the invasion and killings in Pinyin Santa are a gross violation of fundamental human rights. The right to life, liberty, and security, as enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, has been trampled upon. The actions of the Cameroon Occupation Forces reflect a policy of collective punishment and ethnic suppression, violating both International Laws and the rights of indigenous Ambazonia communities.
Call for International Accountability
Pinyin Massacre The International community must not remain silent. Independent investigations, international tribunals, and sanctions against those responsible are necessary steps to ensure justice. The people of Ambazonia continue to suffer under a violent military occupation that disregards both moral obligations and the framework of International Law. The tragedy in Pinyin Santa is not an isolated incident—it is a call for urgent global action.