Niger's Minister of Interior, Public Security,
Decentralization, Customary and Religious Affairs Massaoudou Hassoumi.
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Niger has detained and charged 643 people since February for
their links to the Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram, Security Minister
Hassoumi Massaoudou told parliament.
Niger has deployed 3,000
soldiers to a joint regional force formed with Chad, Cameroon and Nigeria in
order to quash the Boko Haram insurgency, in which thousands have been killed.
Several Boko Haram
networks and sleeper cells have been dismantled in Niger's southern Diffa
region, which is on the border with Nigeria, since a state of emergency was
declared there in February and troops deployed, Massaoudou said.
Reuters report continues:
"If this measure had
not been taken, we could have had an uprising in the very interior of
Diffa," the minister told parliament late on Tuesday.
Those arrested and
detained have been charged with acts of terrorism and criminal conspiracy, he
said.
Diffa came under heavy
attack in February when Boko Haram, which wants to establish an emirate in
northern Nigeria carried out attacks in neighbouring countries.
Boko Haram, which loosely
translates as "Western education is sinful" in the northern Hausa
language, began an insurgency in 2009 to establish a state adhering to strict
sharia law.
The group controlled an
area roughly the size of Belgium at the start of the year but has since been
beaten back by Nigerian troops, backed by Chad, Niger and Cameroon.
Lawmakers also voted on
Tuesday to extend the state of emergency in Diffa by three months.
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