Nigeria should lead a regional anti-Boko Haram force for the duration of its operations, President Muhammadu Buhari says |
Abuja (AFP) - A new regional fighting force against Boko Haram will be headed by a Nigerian commander, the five-nation coalition agreed on Thursday, after talks on military strategy against the militants.
The decision came after Nigeria's
President Muhammadu Buhari rejected calls for a rotating command
between the partners, arguing it could hamper the counter-insurgency
effort.
Buhari has made ending
the six-year Islamist insurgency his top priority but since coming to
power on May 29, more than 150 people have been killed in an upsurge of
attacks.
In the latest sign
of the need for an enhanced force against the rebels, residents said 43
people were killed in raids on three villages in Borno state in
Nigeria's restive northeast.
A
final communique following three days of talks in Abuja on the remit of
the new 8,700-strong force backed Buhari's stance for a Nigerian to
control operations "until the end of the mission".
Cameroon
will take the number two role of "deputy first commander" for an
initial 12 months while a Chadian will be appointed chief of staff,
again for the first year, the statement said.
"National contingents" of
troops for the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) from Nigeria,
Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Benin should be deployed by July 30, it added.
The
MNJTF will replace an existing ad hoc coalition of Nigeria, Niger, Chad
and Cameroon, which has claimed a series of successes against Boko
Haram since February.
But
there are hopes it will be more effective and deliver a hammer blow to
the Islamic State-affiliated group, with at least 15,000 dead and more
than 1.5 million made homeless since 2009.
- Rules of engagement -
Nigeria's
military last week announced that Major-General Tukur Buratai had taken
charge of the MNJTF, which has its headquarters in Chad's capital,
N'Djamena.
The headquarters will cost $30 million (27 million euros) to run in the first year.
Buhari
earlier told his regional counterparts and Cameroon's defence minister,
representing President Paul Biya, that there was a need to view the
insurgency as part of the "global war against terror".
"Terrorism
has no frontiers and they must, because of the great implication for
regional and global peace and security, be defeated," he added.
The
regional meeting was being closely watched for indications about the
extent to which foreign forces can operate inside Nigerian territory.Chad and Niger have both complained the previous administration of Goodluck Jonathan prevented their troops from pursuing militant fighters deeper into Nigeria's northeast.
But Buhari suggested permission for operations of foreign troops on Nigerian soil was not an issue.
"On the rules of engagement, we have gone beyond that because all our neighbours, especially Chad and Niger, have come into Nigerian territory to chase away Boko Haram and secure the territory for Nigeria," he told reporters.
- Funding issue -
Buhari,
an uncompromising former military ruler, has already moved the Nigerian
military's command centre from Abuja to Maiduguri, in the rebels'
northeastern stronghold.
Last weekend, he appealed to world
leaders at the G7 summit in Germany for more help in combating extremism
and visited Chad and Niger to push for longer-term co-operation on
security threats.The flurry of activity, less than two weeks into his presidency, stands in stark contrast to years of apparent inaction in tackling the group under his predecessor.
But
analysts said while his proactive stance on the issue was welcomed by
foreign powers who had grown weary of dealings with Jonathan's regime,
Buhari had little time to act.
The
MNJTF was first agreed in May last year, a month after Boko Haram
shocked the world by kidnapping more than 200 schoolgirls in northeast
Nigeria.
It was supposed to
be operational in November 2014 but was dogged by wrangling between
anglophone Nigeria and its francophone neighbours, whom it has long
viewed with suspicion.
Reviving
the force was brought to the fore in January, as Boko Haram hit
northeast Nigeria almost daily and began to eye territorial gains in
border regions of Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
Nigeria
has promised $100 million for the "smooth take-off" of the MNJTF,
Buhari said on Thursday, but added that longer-term funding was still a
"major issue".
The partners
called for financial backing from the African Union for "operations,
logistics and general mission support" and asked the UN Security Council
for its backing for the force.
They
also "resolved to seek the support of strategic partners, notably (the)
European Union, France, United Kingdom and United States of America in
favour of the MNJTF".
Source: yahoo.com
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