The United States (U.S.) is set to join forces with the Muhammadu Buhari administration in the battle against Boko Haram.
The Obama administration will send a
team to Nigeria in the next few weeks to discuss with the government
ways to renew cooperation in the fight against the sect, a senior U.S.
diplomat said yesterday.
In N’Djamena, the capital of Chad
yesterday, President Buhari and his host President Idris Derby pledged
to pursue the sect members “everywhere”.
They spoke after a bilateral meeting on the activities of the sect, which has been operating across the borders.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was
at Buhari’s inauguration last week. This underscores U.S. interest in
working with his government.
Tensions emerged between the former
government of President Goodluck Jonathan and the Obama administration
last year over corruption and human rights abuses by the military in its
campaign to crush Boko Haram.
In his inauguration speech, Buhari
vowed to defeat Boko Haram and called the group, which pledged
allegiance to the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq in March, “mindless”
and “godless”.
”With the new government, we are
optimistic we can reset the relationship,” U.S. Assistant Secretary of
State for Africa Linda Thomas-Greenfield told a congressional hearing.
“We want to work with him and have expressed that to him.”
She said Buhari had committed both
publicly and privately to “do everything possible to address the
situation in terms of resources and staff” to tackle Boko Haram, which
launched its insurgency in 2009.
U.S. officials have said the United
States could send more advisers to Nigeria to train its military and
help boost the economy, the largest in Africa, through more investment
in its oil and gas sector.
Thomas-Greenfield said the United
States was encouraged that Buhari’s first trips were to neighbors Niger
and Chad, which are part of a multi-national force being set up to fight
Boko Haram’s insurgency in the Lake Chad region.
Nigeria’s Major-General Tukur Buratai
has been appointed to head the new force, which will be funded partly by
the international community.
”He is someone we have worked with and
someone we feel will be a positive force on the multinational task
force,” she said, adding that Buhari was still studying options to fund a
stepped- up effort to tackle Boko Haram.
A communiqué issued at the end of
President Buhari’s one-day visit to Chad said both leaders agreed on the
need to quickly make the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) fully
operational to effectively combat terrorism in Northeast Nigeria and
“everywhere” that Boko Haram operates.
The two Presidents called on the
international community to support the Lake Chad Basin Commission and
neigbouring countries to combat terrorism and insurgency.
“Both Heads of State agreed that the war
on Boko Haram should be supported by emergency development initiatives
in areas affected by this insurgency group.
“This will help to overcome the harmful effects faced by local populations,” the communiqué said.
President Buhari paid tribute to the
gallantry of Chadian soldiers who have engaged in operations against
Boko Haram and condoled the families of their comrades who were killed
in action.
While in the Chadian capital, President
Buhari also met with Gen. Buratai, who has just been appointed Force
Commander of the MNJTF whose headquarters will be in N’Djamena.
Yesterday’s visit was the second of the
two-leg trip by Buhari to neigbouring countries to galvanise them for
the final onslaught against Boko Haram. Buhari was in Niger Republic on
Wednesday.
Buhari noted that the security of
Nigeria and her neighbours were intrinsically linked, adding that it is
very essential that they cooperate on security issues in a robust and
sustained manner.
The President said when it becomes fully
deployed and functional, the MNJTF, which comprises Nigeria, Chad,
Niger and Cameroon, will secure and stabilise all the areas affected by
the Boko Haram insurgency.
He reaffirmed his conviction that with
greater cooperation among Nigeria and neighbouring countries, the Boko
Haram insurgency will be brought to an end very soon.
Buhari thanked Chad for her invaluable support in the fight against insurgency and terrorism.
He said: “Your troops have stood shoulder to shoulder and fought gallantly with ours in the fight against the forces of evil.
“This is a remarkable show of good neighbourliness, which we must reinforce in the years ahead.”
The President said the harrowing images
of displaced citizens of both countries, in search of safety and succour
must spur their governments and others in the sub-region to do more “to
restore their dignity and give them the relief they need”.
On the bilateral relations between
Nigeria and Chad, Buhari noted that both countries were bound by
“nature’’, adding that they must therefore work together to find lasting
solutions to border management, migration and movement of goods and
services.
The President also thanked President
Deby for attending his inauguration ceremony on May 29 in Abuja, adding
that he would return to Nigeria with the assurance that Nigeria and Chad
are poised to intensify their cooperation.
President Deby praised Buhari for his “wise decision’’ to relocate the Nigerian Military Command centre from Abuja to Maiduguri.
The Chadian President said that the
decision, which was announced in President Buhari’s inaugural address,
was a right step towards restoring peace and security to states affected
by terrorism, and the sub-region.
He assured President Buhari that Chad
will continue to work with Nigeria to achieve lasting peace and security
in the sub-region, given their historic, cultural and economic ties.
Source: The Nation
Source: The Nation
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