Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said Tuesday a multinational African force will be in place within 10 days to take the fight to the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram that has killed thousands and was behind the abduction of hundreds of schoolgirls.
Buhari
predicted in an interview with The Associated Press that Boko Haram
would be defeated in 18 months or less. But he conceded that Nigerian
authorities lack intelligence about the girls still missing after the
mass-kidnapping from the northern town of Chibok in April 2014 — an act
that stirred international outrage and a campaign to "Bring Back Our
Girls" that reached as far as the White House.
He
said his government is open to freeing detained militants in exchange
for the girls' freedom, but only if it finds credible Boko Haram leaders
to negotiate with.
"I think
Nigeria will make as much sacrifice as humanly possible to get the girls
back. This is our main objective," Buhari said, a day after meeting
with President Barack Obama.
Buhari
spoke at the presidential guest house opposite the White House in a
room decorated with murals of ceremonial Washington. He wore a
traditional embroidered hat, popular among Muslims in northern Nigeria.
The
visit by the 72-year old former dictator comes two months after taking
office. Both Nigeria and the United States look to improve relations
that soured because of government and military failures under Buhari's
predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan, who was defeated in March elections.
Obama said Monday the U.S. wants to cooperate on counter-terrorism and
in combating corruption in Africa's largest economy and oil producer.
The elections heralded the first
democratic change of power in the West African nation that has suffered
decades of military rule, but Buhari faces formidable challenges — not
least the Boko Haram insurgency that has killed more than 13,000 people
and driven another 1.5 million from their homes.
Buhari,
a former general, last week fired the service chiefs of the once-mighty
Nigerian military, which he has accused of corruption. But he expressed
confidence that the Islamists that have launched suicide bombings and
village attacks since his inauguration, killing hundreds, would be
surrounded and eliminated with the help of neighboring Benin, Chad,
Cameroon and Niger. He said the multinational force would be ready by
the end of the month.
"We are
going to deny them recruitment. We are going to deny them free movement
across borders. We are going to deny them training. We are going to
deny them receiving reinforcement in terms of equipment," said Buhari,
who studied 35 years ago at the U.S. Army War College.
Boko
Haram in March declared an affiliation with the Islamic State group,
and Buhari said it has links with Islamist militants in northern Mali.
But he predicted that the multinational force could break the back of
Boko Haram within 18 months.
Despite
the fighting talk, the Nigerian leader said he remained open to
negotiations over the kidnapped girls but said it was first necessary to
establish that those claiming to negotiate on behalf of the insurgents
were really Boko Haram leaders who know the girls' location and
condition.
Dozens of the schoolgirls escaped in the days after the abduction, but 219 remain missing.
A
human rights activist told AP this month that the extremists are
offering to free the girls in exchange for the release of captured
militant leaders. Buhari said: "We just can't say yes or no in a sort of
an impulsive manner. We have to establish the facts before we agree" to
negotiations.
Buhari's early
visit to Washington is a sign of the importance the U.S. attaches to
good relations with Nigeria, the world's seventh-most populous nation at
170 million and America's top trading partner in Africa. Top U.S. trade
and finance officials have met the Nigerian delegation, and Buhari was
meeting Tuesday with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen.
Martin Dempsey, and CIA Director John Brennan, where he would be urging
more American help against Boko Haram.
"The
United States is very clear of the situation. What we need is
intelligence, we need training facilities, we need some equipment," he
said.
Buhari acknowledged
U.S. concerns over human rights abuses by Nigeria's military. Amnesty
International has accused the Nigerian army's leadership of complicity
in the death of 8,000 detainees in the battle against Boko Haram. Such
concerns prompted Washington last year to block the sale of U.S. attack
helicopters. Buhari said that new military chiefs were retraining forces
and would adhere to internationally acceptable rules of engagement.
Nigeria
also wants U.S. help in recovering government funds and the proceeds of
crude oil exports that have been illegally diverted from the nation's
coffers, also hit by the decline in world oil prices.
In
a Washington Post opinion commentary on Monday, Buhari wrote that $150
billion in funds have been stolen in the past decade and held in foreign
bank accounts on behalf of former, corrupt officials.
Source: AP
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