President
Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday holds talks with regional leaders on Boko Haram,
with hopes a new fighting force will help crush the Islamists after six years
of violence. - Abuja (AFP)
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Heads of state and government from Niger,
Chad, Cameroon and Benin jet in to Nigeria's capital, Abuja, after two days of
preparatory discussions involving military top brass and defence ministers.
The
meetings come on the back of Buhari's appeal to world leaders at the G7 summit
in Germany last weekend for more help in combating extremism and visits to Chad
and Niger.
Buhari,
72, has made ending the militants' reign of terror his top priority and has
already moved the military's command centre from Abuja to Maiduguri, in the
rebels' northeastern stronghold.
AFP report continues:
The flurry of activity since his
inauguration on May 29 stands in stark contrast to years of apparent inaction
in tackling the group by his predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan.
Political analyst Imad Mesdoua said
Buhari, a former military ruler and retired army general, was aware he had to
address the issue swiftly during his honeymoon period with the electorate.
"He
has zero time. I really think he has to hit the ground running. He has to get
everything in place as fast as possible," Mesdoua, from the Africa Matters
consultancy, told AFP from London.
- 'Final solution' -
The five-nation Multi-National Joint Task
Force (MNJTF) was first agreed upon 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.
An
8,700-member unit backed by the African Union was finally agreed, with
headquarters in Chad's capital, N'Djamena, under Nigerian Major General Tukur Buratai.
The
headquarters will cost some $30 million (27 million euros) to run over the next
year, the head of the Lake Chad Basin Commission security group, Sanusi Imran
Abdullahi, said on Wednesday.
Buratai,
who has already started work, according to Abuja, told the BBC on Tuesday the
violence had been "dragging on for too long and we want to get a final
solution to it".
The new MNJTF will replace an existing
coalition of Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon, that has claimed a series of
successes against Boko Haram since February.
Nigeria's chief of defence staff Alex
Badeh said on Monday this week's meetings indicated the countries' "common
resolve to put an end to a menace that has become a regional and... global
problem".
"If
there is any time for us to rise in one voice, irrespective of our differences,
it is now," he added.
- Unprecedented support -
Buhari's
pro-active stance against Boko Haram has sent encouraging signs to the
international community frustrated by dealings with Nigeria under Jonathan,
according to security analysts.
"The G7's unprecedented pledge to
support the country –- details of which are still to be worked out –- reveals
the level of trust key international leaders place in Buhari's
leadership," said Malte Liewerscheidt, senior Africa analyst at Verisk
Maplecroft.
"Enhanced international support will
be critical to sustain the long-term effort needed to defeat the Islamist
insurgents."
The
regional meeting will be closely watched for indications about the extent to
which foreign forces can operate inside Nigerian territory.
Chad and Niger have both complained that
Abuja prevented their troops from pursuing militant fighters deeper into
Nigeria's northeast, allowing the insurgents to get away and re-group.
Buhari has underlined the need for
long-term, regional co-operation, particularly as Boko Haram has allied itself
to Islamic State group militants in Syria and Iraq.
Boko Haram has reverted to guerrilla
tactics since being forced out of captured towns and villages, with at least 12
attacks since Buhari took over and 109 deaths, according to AFP reporting.
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