Fighting
Boko Haram: U.S. President Barack Obama on Wednesday informed Congress he is
sending up to 300 U.S. military personnel to Cameroon
|
*An advance force of 90 U.S. military personnel
arrived in Cameroon on Monday
*The forces will be conducting airborne
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance operations
*The group has proclaimed an Islamic emirate in
neighboring northeastern Nigeria, enforcing a brutal interpretation of Islamic
law
U.S. President Barack
Obama on Wednesday informed Congress he is sending up to 300 U.S. military
personnel to Cameroon, the White House said, part of a stepped-up effort by
Washington to counter the violent group Boko Haram. An advance force of 90
U.S. military personnel has arrived in Cameroon, an administration official
said on condition of anonymity.
The
forces will be conducting airborne intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance operations, the official said, adding they would be armed for
their own protection.
Obama
notified House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, in a letter. The White House released
the letter Wednesday.
Reuters and AP report continues:
U.S.
personnel began deploying on Monday under an arrangement with the Cameroon
government. A total of up to about 300 U.S. service members could be sent.
They
will be armed to provide their own protection and security and will stay in
Cameroon until they are no longer needed.
Cameroon
has been battling Boko Haram militants based in neighboring Nigeria. The group
has vowed to retaliate against Cameroon for backing the Nigerian military's
mission to defeat Boko Haram.
Early
this week, two female suicide bombers suspected to be members of the Nigerian
militant group killed nine people near the town of Mora in Cameroon's Far North
region.
The
group has proclaimed an Islamic emirate in neighboring northeastern Nigeria,
enforcing a brutal interpretation of Islamic law, and also pushed into
neighboring countries.
On
Saturday, five suicide bombers had killed dozens in a part of Chad that borders
Nigeria.
"We
currently have a toll of 11 dead, including the two (female) attackers and nine
civilians, as well as 29 wounded," said a local government source.
Two
military sources said the number of injured was higher, at around 38. A third
woman was accompanying the other bombers but it was not clear if she had also
meant to blow herself up.
Boko
Haram had used Cameroon's Far North region as a base for recruiting and
supplying its operations in Nigeria until last year, when Cameroonian forces
drove it out.
But
it has now stepped up attacks in the area. Last month, two female suicide
bombers killed at least three people in Mora.
Cameroon is participating
in an 8,700-strong, Nigerian-led regional force expected to start operations
against Boko Haram this year.
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