#News: Can regional force defeat Boko Haram?

Started by BBC, Mar 03, 2015, 03:31 AM

BBC

line  Boko Haram at a glance

This screen grab image taken on February 18, 2015 from a video made available by Islamist group Boko Haram shows Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau making a statement at an undisclosed location Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau has declared an "Islamic State" in northern Nigeria  
  • Founded in 2002
  • Initially focused on opposing Western education - Boko Haram means "Western education is forbidden" in the Hausa language
  • Launched military operations in 2009 to create Islamic state
  • Thousands killed, mostly in north-eastern Nigeria - also attacked police and UN headquarters in capital, Abuja
  • Some three million people affected
  • Declared terrorist group by US in 2013
Graph showing number of civilians killed in Boko Haram attacks since 2010  Who are Boko Haram?

Profile: Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau

line  But Nigeria also has a history of border disputes with the neighbours who are now pressing for a regional solution. Whether over islands on Lake Chad that belong to Niger or Chad, or the oil-rich Bakassi peninsula that once led Cameroon and Nigeria to the brink of war.

These tensions went live on Twitter two weeks ago when the spokesperson of Nigeria's army, General Chris Olukolade, furiously responded to comments apparently coming from the defence ministry in Niger suggesting that Nigerian soldiers were running away from Boko Haram fighters.

"Nobody will disrespect my Mother[land]!" he wrote.

Continue reading the main story   “Start Quote
Western powers - perhaps with the exception of France - do not seem inclined to give this force more than a political endorsement to keep it a regional initiative”
End Quote       "We don't cross our boundaries. It is unacceptable for any foreign government to say our soldiers run."

In this context of distrust, it is still unclear whether Nigeria will agree to have Niger and Cameroon conduct cross-border operations, as Chad has already been doing.

Zones of deployment will have to be assigned once the plan agreed in N'djamena is approved by the African Union (AU).

Nevertheless, diplomats concede that the level of co-operation between military planners last week had been "surprisingly impressive".

Diplomatic sources have told the BBC that Nigeria and Chad will provide most of the troops; respectively 3,250 and 3,000 men, including a Chadian special forces unit.

There will be 950 men from Cameroon, 750 from Niger and the remaining 750 from Benin. All of them will be under the command of a Nigerian general.

These figures include infantry troops and artillery but also gendarmes and police squads as well as engineering, logistical and civilian units.

'End of the food chain' No timeline has so far been attached to the current plan; what will be achieved on the ground may drive any future decision to review this deployment.

On the map, the Cameroonian border area seems left out of the plan, which may force Chad to keep its current scenario going with some of its troops deployed south of its capital to fight alongside the Cameroonian forces.

As for the United Nations, "it comes a bit at the end of the food chain", a source at the Security Council said.

Western powers - perhaps with the exception of France - do not seem inclined to give this force more than a political endorsement to keep it a regional initiative.

Still, Nigeria is "dragging its feet at the Security Council", as another diplomatic source at the UN put it.

"Nigeria remains passive on the issue and it makes sure that things don't move forward when it should be the pen-holder [submitting statements and texts]."

A campaign poster of incumbent presidential candidate, Goodluck Jonathan, torn apart on a street Corner in Lagos, Nigeria President Jonathan is hoping success against Boko Haram will help his re-election campaign  It is election time in Nigeria and there is a sense that mounting a plan against Boko Haram now puts the incumbent President, Goodluck Jonathan, in an uncomfortable position.

After six years of escalating violence in Nigeria's north-eastern states, the Nigerian authorities have postponed the general election to allow time for a last-minute offensive against the insurgents.

Continue reading the main story   “Start Quote
All we see is the failure coming from six years of non-action”
End Quote UN Security Council source       But although Nigerian troops have recaptured a number of towns from Boko Haram's hands - at times with Chadian help - over the past two weeks, there is little chance that the insurgency can be crushed before the end of the month, when the election is now due.

Mr Jonathan, who is seen as having barely dealt with the crisis, is now squeezed between his electoral campaign and a military offensive, hoping that both will turn in his favour.

In the meantime, Chad has clearly taken the lead. At the UN Security Council, where it is said to be "pushy", and on the ground, with Chadian troops deployed in Nigeria but also in Cameroon and in Niger.

Chad has been impatient to act in order to protect its supply routes, crucial to its economy. Goods come through Cameroon's Far North while it exports oil through a pipeline running through Nigeria's Adamawa state.  

There is scepticism that Nigeria will even bring a resolution before the Security Council following the AU vote, in which case Chad would probably seek UN backing for the region.

Boko Haram regional growth? Funds for the MNJTF will not directly come from the United Nations but from donor countries led by France, the US and the UK, which will all stress human rights issues, given the track records of the armies involved.

In a paper published last month, Marc-Antoine Perouse de Montclos, researcher at Chatham House, suggested that a multi-national response to Boko Haram's threat might just help the Nigerian Islamist insurgency take on a more regional dimension.

After all, Boko Haram launched its first attacks on Chad and Niger after the authorities of both countries said that they were joining the fight.

On the contrary but with tempered optimism, Western diplomats reckon that this current plan will at best stop a Boko Haram spill-over in the region and weaken the insurgency in Nigeria.

Boko Haram fighters in promotional video Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Boko Haram in 60 seconds

But it will not be enough to flush it out of the north-eastern states.

"Nigeria isn't really part of the game so far, but Abuja is obviously key to solving the crisis," wrote Mr Perouse de Montclos.

Diplomats agree. The MNJTF may well get the institutional framework it will need to operate, but the co-operation efforts made by Nigeria's francophone neighbours will not achieve much without a real Nigerian strategy - both military and political - against Boko Haram.

A source at the UN Security Council bluntly summed it up: "All we see is the failure coming from six years of non-action.

"Nigeria needs to get a lot more involved."


Source: BBC