Regional and Western
powers were on Saturday urged to do more to stop the threat from Boko Haram, as
the UN voiced concern about the militants' ties to the Islamic State group and
threat to African security.
AFP
report continues:
Nigeria
invited leaders of its neighbours Benin, Cameroon, Chad and Niger to Abuja,
whose troops will be deployed as part of a much-delayed 8,500-member regional
force to combat the Islamists.
But
delegates -- including French President Francois Hollande -- were told that
despite major gains since the last security summit two years ago in Paris, more
needed to be done to eradicate Boko Haram and tackle the root causes of
extremism.
The
final communique said a "global approach" was required, comprising
hard and soft power, to end the threat.
Britain's
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond characterized the fight against extremist
ideology as "a generational struggle against an evil that will destroy us
if we do not destroy it".
"We
must sustain this fight until evil is defeated and good prevails," he told
the gathering, calling for countries affected to win the "hearts and minds
of those terrorized by Boko Haram".
US
Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken also said respect for human rights was
essential, after repeated accusations of military abuses against civilians and
Boko Haram suspects.
He
warned that not addressing the drivers of extremism -- poverty, deprivation,
lack of opportunity and education -- would create "Boko Haram 2.0"
even if the group were defeated militarily.
- Islamic State links -
Nearly
seven years of violence in northeast Nigeria has left at least 20,000 dead and
displaced more than 2.6 million people in one of the world's most brutal
conflicts.
The
United Nations Security Council on Friday expressed "deep concern" at
Boko Haram's threat to security in West and Central Africa and "alarm
at... linkages with the Islamic State", which operates in Syria, Iraq and
Libya.
Boko
Haram's shadowy leader Abubakar Shekau pledged allegiance to his IS counterpart
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi last year, although there has since been little evidence
of direct support on the ground.
Chad's
President Idriss Deby highlighted the threat from Libya, which has long been
seen as a source for arms and explosives smuggled into the Sahel region and
which is facing multiple threats from jihadist groups.
Boko
Haram fighters are reported to be in Libya, raising concerns about their
possible return.
France's
Hollande said because of Boko Haram's links to IS and its status as "the
world's deadliest terrorist group", it "remains a threat" and
no-one should drop its guard.
After
controlling territory in northeast Nigeria the size of Belgium in 2014, Boko
Haram has been pushed back in the last 15 months to remote border areas on and
around Lake Chad, whose waters form the border between Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad
and Niger.
The
new, regional Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF), which has African Union
backing and is based in Chad's capital N'Djamena under a Nigerian general, was
supposed to have deployed last July.
Plugging
gaps and improving coordination between armies that are currently operating
largely independently is seen as vital when it is eventually deployed, as the
region's borders are notoriously porous.
- 'Food crisis' -
Western
powers in particular have indicated more confidence in Nigerian President
Muhammadu Buhari's government than the previous administration of Goodluck
Jonathan, offering training, intelligence-sharing and equipment.
Britain
has committed nearly £40 million (US$58 million, €51 million) to "counter
and counter-extremism support" over the next four years.
The
EU has contributed €50 million to the MNJTF, said the bloc's top diplomat
Frederica Mogherini.
But
Buhari said an estimated 960 million euros was required for short- and
medium-term development in the Lake Chad region.
US
ambassador to the UN Samantha Power, who visited northeast Nigeria and northern
Cameroon last month, said 9.2 million people in the wider region were affected
by the conflict.
Hollande
said France last year gave €17 million in aid and it was "vital that the
international community does more", announcing the creation of a specific
"Lake Chad Initiative" through his country's development agency.
Two
million internally displaced Nigerians are currently living in host communities
or camps, with little prospect of an immediate return to their homes.
Homes,
businesses, schools, medical facilities, government offices, power and
telecommunications infrastructure, water sources and land in the mainly
agricultural region have all been destroyed or damaged in the fighting.
The government of Nigeria's Borno state -- the worst-hit by the violence -- has said the displaced face a "food crisis" and US$5.9 billion was needed to rebuild shattered infrastructure.
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