Defence ministers and
officials of 27 African and Arab countries began a two-day meeting in Egypt on
Thursday that will explore military and counter-terrorism cooperation.
AFP
report continues:
Community
of Sahel-Saharan States (CEN-SAD) members were meeting in the Red Sea resort
town of Sharm El-Sheikh, where the Egyptian military deployed in force to
secure the conference.
"The
situation in the Sahel-Saharan states is very worrying," said the Nigerien
CEN-SAD Secretary General Ibrahim Sani Abani in his opening speech, citing
weapons and narcotics trafficking, and jihadist groups such as Boko Haram.
"This
phenomenon knows no boundaries and no state can protect only itself, it
requires a coordinated and concerted response."
In
a statement, he had said the meeting would discuss draft agreements on military
cooperation and conflict resolution, and drug and arms trafficking.
Several
of the bloc's members, including Egypt, are locked in wars with jihadist groups
who have killed thousands of people in attacks and taken control of some
territories.
"Terrorism
and extremism presents a strong threat that has spread across all
continents," Egyptian Defence Minister Sedki Sobhi said in a speech, after
calling for a moment of silence for victims of attacks.
In
Egypt alone, Islamist militants have killed hundreds of policemen and soldiers,
and bombed a plane carrying Russian tourists that had taken off from Sharm
El-Sheikh in October, killing 224 people.
The
meeting in Sharm is the fifth CEN-SAD defence ministers' meeting since the
bloc's founding in 1998.
The group was founded in
part to promote a free trade area among member states.
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