Saturday, 17 May 2014

African Leaders declare 'war' on Boko Haram

Chad's President Idriss Debi, French President Francois Hollande, and Nigeria President Goodluck Jonathan, from left, pose upon his arrival for the "Paris' Security in Nigeria summit", at the Elysee Palace, in Paris, Saturday, May 17, 2014. Leaders from Africa as well as officials from the United States, Britain and France meet to coordinate a response to Boko Haram, the fundamentalist group that abducted more than 300 girls and is accused of hundreds of deaths in the past year alone. African leaders meeting in Paris have agreed to wage "war" on Nigeria's Boko Haram Islamic militants.
French President Hollande, who hosted the summit, said regional powers had pledged to share intelligence and co-ordinate action against the group.
Last month it abducted 223 schoolgirls in north-eastern Nigeria, where it is based. Fresh attacks were reported in Nigeria and Cameroon overnight.
Thousands of people have been killed by Boko Haram in recent years.
The Paris summit brought together Mr Hollande, Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan, and their counterparts from Benin, Cameroon, Niger and Chad.

As it opened, Mr Hollande called Boko Haram a "major threat to West and Central Africa", and said it had links with al-Qaeda's North-African arm and "other terrorist organisations".
After the meeting, he said participants had agreed on a "global and regional action plan".
This included sharing intelligence, monitoring borders and co-ordinating action, including possible operations involving French troops in the region, Mr Hollande said.
Screen grab of video released by Boko Haram showing abducted Nigerian schoolgirls (12 May 2014)
A video emerged on Monday showing about 130 of the girls wearing hijabs and reciting Koranic verses
President Idriss Deby of Chad said regional powers would "tackle this situation head on" and wage "total war on Boko Haram".
Representatives from the UK, US and EU also took part in the meeting.
Mr Jonathan was due on Friday to visit the town where the girls were seized. However the trip was cancelled for security reasons.
Boko Haram released a video earlier this week showing more than 100 of the girls and offering an exchange for prisoners.
The girls, who include Christians and Muslims, were seized on 14 April from their school hostel in the north-east Nigerian town of Chibok in Borno state.
President Jonathan has ruled out negotiations over their possible release, officials say.
As Saturday's summit began, news of fresh violence emerged.
In the far north of Cameroon, near the Nigerian border, attackers targeted a camp run by a Chinese engineering company. Ten Chinese workers are missing and one person was injured.
There are reports that one person was killed.
In Nigeria itself, 11 people were reported killed in a separate attack in village a few hours' drive from the Cameroonian border.
A relative of one of the victims said a woman and a child were among the dead.

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