Boko Haram are no longer in a position to
seize a single town in Niger, a Niger government minister said today,
following a regional effort to boost the fight against the Islamist group.
Thousands of troops from Niger and Chad,
which had gathered in southeastern Niger, launched a major ground and air
offensive against the Islamist group last Sunday and succeeded in retaking the
northeastern Nigerian town of Damasak.
“The situation is totally under control.
There is no longer any chance that Boko Haram will take a city… The risks of
attacks occurring are very much reduced by the elimination of all the potential
actors,” Mohamed Bazoum, Niger’s Minister of State at the Presidency, said
during a visit to Ivory Coast.
“It’s a feeling of total calmness that
prevails with the idea that Boko Haram is rather a thing of the past,” he said.
He said the situation was a far cry from
the “real, totally irrational panic” that had gripped Niger after the first
attack by the Nigeria-based Boko Haram on its neighbour in early February.
More than 13,000 people have been killed
and some 1.5 million made homeless in the Boko Haram conflict since 2009, while
recent cross-border attacks launched from Boko Haram strongholds in Nigeria on
neighbouring countries have increased security fears.
A regional coalition has claimed a series
of successes in rebel-held territory in recent weeks, as part of an operation
to clear and control northeast Nigeria in time for Nigeria’s general elections
set for March 28.
There has not been a Boko Haram attack
reported in Niger for nearly two weeks.
Regional forces have been particularly
active in the Gamboru area of Nigeria on the border with Cameroon. The borders
of Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon converge in the region around Lake Chad.
- ‘ Thing of the past’ -
Last week’s joint Niger-Chad offensive that
retook Damasak came the day after the leader of Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau,
pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (IS).
In doing so, the Nigerian militants joined
extremists from Libya to Pakistan who have previously done the same, as IS
looks to expand its reach.
In recent weeks, previously poorly produced
Boko Haram videos have taken on the look and feel of more polished IS
propaganda and been posted directly online, guaranteeing a wider audience.
Boko Haram had held Damasak, near the Niger
border, since November 2014, part of a swathe of territory it had seized in
Nigeria’s northeast.
According to a Chadian security source,
some 200 Boko Haram fighters were left dead in the offensive, while 10 Chadian
soldiers were killed and 20 wounded.
On March 6, the African Union endorsed the
creation of an additional regional force of up to 10,000 men to join the fight
against Boko Haram.
The regional coalition already operating —
including troops from Cameroon, Niger and Chad — has given renewed vigour to
the previously lacklustre counter-insurgency.
Raw story
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