St. Kitts and Nevis signed a joint communique formalizing diplomatic relations with Republic of Cameroon
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mark A. G. Brantley, a person who advocates the built Africa-Caribbean partnership, celebrated the signing ceremony
10th of June 2021

During a short, early afternoon ceremony at Saint Kitts’s and Nevis High Commission in London, diplomat Kevin M. Isaac, joined by his counterpart, Albert NJOTEH FOTABANG, diplomat of the Republic of Cameroon, and approved a joint communique formalizing diplomatic relationships between the 2 countries.
This keeps the government’s strategic commitment to develop enduring relationships and increase further relationships with countries over the African continent. Although the high spread of the COVID-19 pandemic has restricted intercommunications, the govt continues to review ways post COVID-19 to exploit best the possible synergies that arise from bilateral and multilateral commitments with African countries.
Both diplomats who collaborate closely within the Commonwealth Secretariat’s Board of Governors reviewed opportunities for collaboration within the UK, also as the way to form partnerships, increase opportunities for cultural exchanges, and intensify support for small states in international organizations, quite just the United Nations. During the conference, diplomat Isaac and Ambassador Fotabang agreed to secure an agreement on reciprocal visa exemption that might leave visa-free access to each other’s region.
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mark A. G. Brantley, a person who advocates the built Africa-Caribbean partnership, celebrated the signing ceremony as an excellent opportunity to build people-to-people linkages and government-to-government collaboration. Ambassador Fotabang repeated the sentiments of High Commissioner Isaac that our Commonwealth sisters and brothers must serve together to mark common challenges, mainly post COVID-19, to address issues of vaccine investment, climate change and financial flexibility.
The Republic of Cameroon, a rustic of roughly 25 million people, is found in west-central Africa. It’s bordered by Nigeria to the west and north; Chad to the northeast; the Central African Republic to the east; Chad to the northeast; Gabon, therefore the Republic of the Congo to the south and Equatorial Guinea. Cameroon’s market-based, diversified economic features oil and gas, aluminum, timber, agriculture, mining.
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