Nigeria on Thursday welcomed a US decision to send up to 300 military
personnel to Cameroon to help the regional fight against Boko Haram,
despite having itself requested more direct help from Washington.
President
Muhammadu Buhari's spokesperson Garba Shehu said the deployment was a
"welcome development" while the military said it demonstrated
co-operation was needed against the Islamists.
US President Barack
Obama on
Thursday said 90 personnel had already been sent and the full
contingent would conduct intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance
operations.
"The United States has given the pledge to support the
fight against Boko Haram in Nigeria and in the region," Shehu told AFP
by telephone.
"This is the fulfilment of that pledge and we are very happy about it. The United States' move is quite commendable."
New date
Military
spokesperson Colonel Rabe Abubakar added: "This is how the fight can be
done collectively with partners co-operating with us to fight against a
common cause - terrorism - which has been ravaging the region for some
time now.
"We appeal to other nations to emulate the good example
of the United States. The United States has experience in fighting
terrorism.
"Fighting terrorism is not one nation's issue. It requires a global effort. We all need to work together... to fight this evil."
Buhari,
who took office in May vowing to end the violence and on Wednesday met
the US military's Africa Command chief General David Rodriguez in Abuja,
has spearheaded efforts for a new, five-nation fighting force against
Boko Haram.
The Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) was due to
be deployed in late July but the deadline passed with no new date
announced for it to start.
Diplomatic relations
The
US announcement comes after the Islamic State group-allied militants
have increased attacks against civilians using suicide bombers in border
areas of Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
Diplomatic relations
between Abuja and Washington were strained under Buhari's predecessor,
Goodluck Jonathan, over the United States' refusal to sell weapons to
Nigeria.
Buhari repeated those criticisms in July on a visit to
the US capital, asserting the embargo - in place because of his
military's human rights record - was helping Boko Haram.
Washington
last year provided intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance
expertise to Nigeria in the hunt for more than 200 girls abducted from
their school.
The assistance included drones and spy planes as well as up to 80 military personnel sent to Chad's capital, N'Djamena.
Thursday, October 15, 2015
Nigeria welcomes US troops for Cameroon over Boko Haram
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