The measure applies to the city of Bamenda, the hub of Northwest Region, where two policemen were killed on Tuesday, a day after an officer was gunned down in a nearby town.
Under a decree issued by the local prefect, obtained today by AFP, all movement of people and vehicles in Bamenda is being banned from November 8 to 23, from 10 pm to 5 am.
In a separate decision, the authorities also said that shops and public spaces would be closed during this period.
Yesterday, two gendarmes were killed while on guard duty in Bamenda and a civilian killed, according to concurring sources.
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The killings came a day after a fellow policeman was shot dead in Jakiri, about 70 km to the east, while he was pursuing men who attacked a school, according to local officials.
The assaults have been blamed on "secessionist terrorists" -- the government's term for armed militants demanding that Cameroon's two English-speaking regions break away from the francophone-majority country.
Gathered mainly in the Northwest and Southwest Regions, many English speakers say they suffer economic inequality and discrimination at the hands of the francophone majority, particularly in education and justice.
On October 1, a breakaway movement issued a symbolic declaration of independence for their putative state of "Ambazonia".
President Paul Biya fiercely opposes secession or a return to Cameroon's former federal structure.
The agitation began at the end of 2016 but has recently met with a crackdown that has alarmed human-rights watchdogs.
At least 14 people have died in clashes, as well as five prisoners who were killed while trying to escape jail, according to a toll compiled by AFP.
According to the privately owned newspaper Le Jour, the Cameroonian authorities have issued international arrest warrants for 15 anglophone separatists who live abroad, including Sisiku Ayuk Tabe, the head of the putative state.