The United States is considering selling Nigeria ground
attack planes to help fight Boko Haram rebels, officials said Friday, despite
concerns over the local military’s human rights record. Nigeria’s Western
allies have vowed to assist the West African giant in its fight against the
brutal Islamist group, but have been cautious of providing arms to troops
regularly accused of extrajudicial killings.....
“We provide training and other
assistance to numerous Nigerian security force units not implicated in human
rights violations and we believe that assistance has and will have a
significant impact on Nigeria’s fight to defeat Boko Haram.” Buhari, a former
military dictator, was elected to the Nigerian presidency last year, replacing
the incumbent Goodluck Jonathan, whose government was widely derided as
incompetent and corrupt. Since Buhari came to office, the United States has
sought new ways to help out in the struggle against Boko Haram, but has
proceeded cautiously because of the Nigerian military’s reputation for
brutality.
“As a matter of policy, we do not comment on proposed US defense
sales or transfers until they have been formally notified to Congress,” said
David McKeeby, spokesman for the State Department’s bureau of
political-military affairs. “Nigeria is a strategic partner of the United
States and we continue to work closely together on security matters,” he said.
“We provide a range of assistance to Nigerian authorities, including advisors,
intelligence, training, survivor support services and advice on strategic
communications.” Boko Haram’s insurgency began in northeast Nigeria and has
spread to parts of neighboring Niger, Chad and Cameroon — where French and US
forces have been more active in helping local armies fight the rebels. More
than 20,000 people have been killed since fighting began in 2009, many of them
in large-scale slaughters of civilians by insurgents, but some in heavy-handed
military operations.
source: vanguard
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