Muhammadu Buhari arrives for a photo call at the
African Union Summit in Sandton, South Africa, on June 14, 2015 ©Gianluigi
Guercia (AFP)
|
President
Muhammadu Buhari is planning to visit Cameroon to cement a regional fighting
force against Boko Haram, he told AFP on Monday.
Buhari met his counterparts from Niger, Chad and Benin
at a summit in Abuja last week but Cameroon's leader Paul Biya was noticeably
absent and represented by his defence minister.
The two countries have long had strained ties, in part
over a bitter territorial dispute but also after Boko Haram mounted
cross-border raids into northeast Nigeria from Cameroon's far north.
AFP report continues:
Buhari visited Niger and Chad in his first week in
office and said he would have gone to Cameroon's capital Yaounde for talks with
Biya had he not been invited to attend the G7 summit in Germany.
"But on my return to Nigeria now, I will try to
go to Cameroon," he said on the sidelines of the African Union summit in
Johannesburg.
Last week's Abuja summit rubber-stamped an
8,700-strong regional force involving the five countries to replace an ad hoc
coalition of Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
The current force came into being after Chad's
President Idriss Deby sent troops to assist their Cameroonian counterparts
against a wave of attacks by the Islamist militants.
Troops from Niger and Chad have crossed into Nigerian
territory but those from Cameroon have not, in an indication of the strained
relations between the neighbours.
But Buhari indicated last Thursday that soldiers from
the new Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) would not be restricted in
terms of movement.
The MNJTF will be headed by a Nigerian officer for the
duration of the mission, with his deputy from Cameroon for an initial 12 months
once troops are deployed from July 30.
Buhari has made crushing Boko Haram his immediate
priority since coming to power on May 29 and he told AFP that foreign support
was vital.
"The most important support is intelligence. What
we are looking for from the G7... is intelligence. We want help in terms of
logistics," he said.
"Boko Haram declared that they are in alliance
with ISIS, so terrorism has gone international. They are in Mali, they are in
Nigeria, they are in Syria, they are in Iraq, they are in Yemen...
"It's an international problem now," he
said.
In the interview, Buhari also addressed concerns he
had not yet appointed a cabinet more than two weeks after he came to power
following his victory in March polls.
"I don't know why people are so anxious to have
ministers, but eventually we will have," he said.
Buhari said that audits were currently being carried
out in various government departments -- and the finance and petroleum
ministries in particular -- to try and establish what situation they were left
in by the previous administration.
"I am not in a hurry to get ministers," he
said.
"I want to get ministers after at least I have
seen this report, so that I don't have to appoint a minister today and sack him
next week."
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