West Africa's Arid Sahel Region |
Defence ministers from
West Africa's arid Sahel region have agreed to work together to establish
special rapid reaction forces to counter the growing threat from al Qaeda and
Islamic State-linked militants.
Reuters
report continues:
With
its vast, loosely controlled desert expanses on the edge of the Sahara and its
porous borders, the Sahel has proved to be fertile soil for the expansion of
Islamist militancy in one of the world's poorest regions.
At
a meeting in Chad's capital N'Djamena, defence chiefs from Chad, Niger, Burkina
Faso, Mali and Mauritania -- the so-called G5 Sahel countries -- pledged to
form special units to respond quickly to threats and attacks from Islamist
militants.
"These
groups, each composed of around 100 well-trained and very mobile men, will
deploy in zones where the terrorists operate," the G5 Sahel's permanent
secretary Najim Elhadj Mohamed said following the meeting late on Friday.
He
said the units, tailored after Spanish forces used against the Basque
separatist group ETA, would receive training and support from both Spain and
France.
French
Prime Minister Manuel Valls, during a visit to the region last month, promised
to boost assistance to the Sahel countries in the wake of dramatic attacks on
hotels in Burkina Faso and Mali claimed by al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
(AQIM).
Intelligence
will be compiled at a threat analysis and early warning centre to be
established in Mauritania, where the Sahel group also plans to create a special
war college.
Financing
was expected to come from European Union funding already pledged to the Sahel
nations, the regional body said.
The
G5 Sahel heads of state already called for the creation of a multinational
force last year.
French
forces intervened in 2013 to drive back Islamist fighters after they seized
Mali's desert north a year earlier, citing concern that the area could become a
launching pad for attacks on targets in Europe.
However,
the militants have since reorganized and launched a wave of attacks against
local security forces, U.N. peacekeepers and civilian targets that has extended
well beyond northern Mali and into neighbouring countries.
Meanwhile Nigeria's Boko
Haram, which has pledged its allegiance to the Islamic State, is stepping up
raids and suicide bombings in the Lake Chad region, which straddles the borders
between Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Cameroon.
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