Breaking News
Summit To Be “Decisive” For Boko Haram Task Force- Benin Rep.
Countries waging a regional fight
against Boko Haram will take significant steps towards establishing a
joint task force when they meet on Thursday in Abuja, Benin’s president
said.
Boko Haram has killed thousands and
displaced around 1.5 million people during a six-year insurgency,
seeking to establish an Islamic emirate and extending its reach into
neighbouring Chad and Cameroon.
At start of the year, it controlled
territory about the size of Belgium in northeast Nigeria, but a loosely
coordinated offensive by Nigeria’s army and troops from Chad, Cameroon
and Niger has pushed it out of most of those areas.
Nigeria’s neighbours have been urging
closer coordination and the deployment of a joint task force,
headquartered in the Chadian capital N’Djamena. But diplomats say the
process has been slowed down by reservations about foreign troops
operating on its soil and by its presidential election in March.
Benin’s Thomas Boni Yayi said the new president, Muhammadu Buhari, was “very determined”.
“The discussions we have had with him
reassure us,” he told reporters after talks with French President
Francois Hollande in Paris. “We are going to put an end to this odious
phenomenon. This summit will be decisive.”
The defence chiefs of Nigeria, Niger,
Cameroon, Chad and Benin were meeting in Abuja on Tuesday to lay the
groundwork for the task force.
Benin has not deployed any troops against Boko Haram yet, but has agreed in principle to join the force.
Yayi Boni said this could begin once the
U.N. Security Council passed a resolution, which has been in discussion
for several months, endorsing the mission.
“These are international rules and, once it is passed, there won’t be any more obstacles,” he said.
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