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Akwalefo Bernadette Djeudo
Attempted Senator nominated by the incumbent CPDM party Central Committee as one of the candidates for the West region, for the first ever organized Senatorial Elections in Cameroon, I, author view moreAttempted Senator nominated by the incumbent CPDM party Central Committee as one of the candidates for the West region, for the first ever organized Senatorial Elections in Cameroon, I, author Akwalefo Bernadette Djeudo, is Cameroonian by birth and a veteran educationist involved in community affairs, civil society activities and the political development process of my country to ensure my voice is heard and my vote counted. I have a BA, MA and DEA in economic geography, a post graduate diploma in Education, a certificate in pro-poor project design of development interventions and recently an MA in Public Management. I was born on the 3/3/1966 in a small clan called the Fondonera Kingdom where I am today the Regent Paramount Ruler. My biological father was the paramount ruler of my clan, a clan made up of 26 administratively recognized third class villages. He had more than 100 wives and about 200 children. During his reign, children were looked upon as wealth, but wealth itself excluded any formal educational training. Living in conditions of extreme poverty, it took God’s abundant Grace for me to go to school. My career goal at the moment is to get involved in public affairs with a concentration in economic and social development and to acquire skills in analysing the political, economic, organisational and normative aspects of complex societal and political problems related to sustainable development and poverty reduction. My definite major purpose and labour of love is to fight poverty with its political and environmental ramification, with passion and professionalism.
I do not believe that men were meant to live in the foes of poverty, degradation, slums and ignorance. I believe that man by virtue of his humanity should live in the light of reason, exercise moral responsibility and be free to develop to the full the talents that are in him. I also believe that poverty can be done with not by increasing the number of well to do people who think about poverty, but by increasing the number of people who purpose with faith to get rich. What tends to do away with poverty is not the getting of pictures of poverty in to the minds but getting pictures of wealth into the minds of the poor. The poor do not need charity; they need inspiration that will cause them to rise, out of their misery. I believe that the poor can develop their minds to attract only positive vibration of prosperity, health, success, happiness and not those of fear, poverty, disease and misery from the Universal storehouse of the ether. I want to always speak of the poor as those who are becoming rich, those who are to be congratulated rather that pitied.view less