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Nigeria and Cameroon seek closer partnership against Boko Haram

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari began a two-day visit to Cameroon on Wednesday in a bid to strengthen cooperation against al-Qaeda-linked Islamist militant group Boko Haram.

Buhari’s first visit to Cameroon since his election in March comes as the militant group, which has sworn allegiance to Islamic State, has launched a fresh wave of attacks in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

Buhari, and Cameroonian President Paul Biya are to hold talks at the presidential palace on Wednesday, before making a joint statement ahead of Buhari’s departure on Thursday.

Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger waged an offensive against Boko Haram this year that broke its grip over parts of northeastern Nigeria, but it responded with suicide bombings and raids that have spilled the conflict across borders.

Tensions are running high in Cameroon’s Far North region after three suicide attacks in the past week killed at least 60 people, prompting the local government to announce the closure of some mosques, ban burqas and forbid street hawkers.

In Nigeria, suspected Boko Haram attacks have killed at least 600 people since Buhari took office two months ago.

Cameroon’s Information Minister Issa Tchiroma Bakari said Boko Haram had switched to attacking civilian targets because it was no longer capable of military engagements.

“The heads of state are going to discuss the best means of eradicating this new form of belligerence and the strategies to reduce Boko Haram,” he said.

An African Union-mandated, 8,700-strong regional taskforce, headquartered in the Chadian capital N’Djamena, is due to start operations at the end of this month.

The Nigerian presidency said the talks would focus on the activation and deployment of this force. Buhari is due to visit Benin, the fifth member of the operation, on Saturday.

Relations between Cameroon and Nigeria have been strained by a border dispute that flared into conflict in 1993. Biya, did not attend Buhari’s inauguration and the Nigerian leader’s trip comes nearly two months after he visited Chad and Niger.

In the past, Nigeria has accused Cameroon of dragging its feet over tackling Boko Haram, which analysts say established rear bases on the Cameroonian side of the Mandara mountains.

Cameroon has complained that its efforts to combat the militants have been hampered by Nigeria’s refusal to grant its forces the right to pursue them onto its soil, which both Chad and Niger enjoy.

“Buhari’s visit should help ease the climate of mistrust between Cameroon and Nigeria,” said Njoya Moussa, a Cameroonian political analyst.

Source: Reuters

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