Broaden Monitoring Compass In a country like Cameroon where corruption, as seen through the eyes of critics, is an endemic problem in trade and governance and which greatly facilitates money laundering and other financial crimes as well as significantly retards broad-based socio-economic development, there is every reason to worry. More so because the effects of the financial crimes are so damaging that nothing can be guaranteed for the present and future generations were the situation to remain unrepentant. Lire aussi : RCA : une quête permanente The country might have gone places in the fight against the scourge looking at existing legal and administrative instruments likewise structures. But the threat from the ‘difficult-to-die’ activity calls for accrued vigilance from across the board. Analysts hold that the six member countries of CEMAC share a sub-regional central bank, (BEAC) and a common currency, the Central Africa (CFA) Franc with dysfunctions in cross-border cooperation between national agencies almost inevitable. Traffickers and money launderers may exploit this to wreak havoc. No one is certainly oblivious of the fact that as the largest economy in the region, such regulatory weaknesses may at the domestic level, result in Cameroon being used as a channel to move funds from those countries to better investment destinations in and out of Africa.Lire aussi : Concertation et communication