French
President Francois Hollande (C) poses for a familly photo with
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan, African leaders and EU
representatives,
African and Western leaders agreed on Saturday to combine
their intelligence information and defence mechanisms in a bid to reduce
the security risk posed by Boko Haram. French President, François
Hollande, called the islamist group a 'global' threat that warrants a
'global' response.'
It accomplished what it set out to do. Saturday's security
summit saw leaders from Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, Chad and Benin agree
to share their technical know-how with Western allies France, the U.S
and Britain to defeat Boko Haram.
The plan adopted incorporates the following:
French President François Hollande, who hosted the meeting, said the islamist group wasn't just "Nigeria's problem, but the whole world's."
"They have links to terrorist organizations throughout Africa and could destabilize the entire continent," he said during a press conference following the summit.
"The aim was to identify the threat posed by Boko Haram and to deal with it", Hollande stated, but ruled out putting French boots on the ground.
"This organization is capable of endangering the lives of innocent civilians, of abducting young girls and reducing them to bondage, to sell them," he added.
His Nigerian counterpart, Goodluck Jonathan, who called for the summit, has been strongly criticized for his handling of the girls' abduction.
I am "completely committed to getting our girls back", he declared, more than one month after their abduction.
The plan adopted incorporates the following:
- Co-ordinated, regional strategy to boost intelligence-sharing
- Creation of surveillance and border-controls
- Centralizing technical means and capability
- Military presence around Lake Chad
- Security-defence mechanism in danger situations
French President François Hollande, who hosted the meeting, said the islamist group wasn't just "Nigeria's problem, but the whole world's."
"They have links to terrorist organizations throughout Africa and could destabilize the entire continent," he said during a press conference following the summit.
"The aim was to identify the threat posed by Boko Haram and to deal with it", Hollande stated, but ruled out putting French boots on the ground.
"This organization is capable of endangering the lives of innocent civilians, of abducting young girls and reducing them to bondage, to sell them," he added.
His Nigerian counterpart, Goodluck Jonathan, who called for the summit, has been strongly criticized for his handling of the girls' abduction.
I am "completely committed to getting our girls back", he declared, more than one month after their abduction.
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