Republic of Chad, a member of the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF)
against the terrorist groups, Boko Haram and Islamic State’s West
Africa Province (ISWAP), has issued Nigeria and Niger Republic an April
22 ultimatum to reoccupy territories Chadian troops seized from Boko
Haram because it will withdraw its forces from those locations by that
date. President of Chad Idris Deby said he had warned the two countries
that his forces would move out of the bases seized from the jihadists by
April 22, regardless of whether their armed forces moved in or not.
Speaking
in an interview, Derby said his troops deployed to fight jihadists in
the Lake Chad region and the Sahel will no longer take part in military
operations outside national borders.
“Our troops have died for
Lake Chad and the Sahel. From today, no Chadian soldiers will take part
in a military mission outside Chad,” he told national TV in Arabic. His
remarks were broadcast in French on Friday.
The Chadian
president’s position depicted widening cracks in the coalition, which he
said was the outcome of poor commitment to the war against insurgency
by other coalition partners.
Derby had led his troops in a
counterattack that decimated about 1,000 Boko Haram fighters, prompting
the leader of the terror group, Abubakar Shakau, to appeal to his
fighters not to be deterred by the onslaught against them by the Chadian
troops. Chadian armed forces said they had wound up the operation
against Boko Haram in the Lake Chad region, saying 52 soldiers have been
lost and a thousand jihadists killed.
The operation was launched
after 98 Chadian soldiers were killed in a Boko Haram raid on a base at
Bohoma in the lake’s marshlands on March 23, the biggest one-day
military loss in the country’s history.
The four countries
bordering the lake – Nigeria, Chad, Niger, and Cameroon – and Benin
Republic had in 2015 set up the military coalition, MNJTF, to fight Boko
Haram. But Chad, which has some of the strongest armed forces in the
Sahel, showed frustration with the MNJTF following the Bohoma losses.
“Chad is alone in shouldering all the burden of the war against Boko Haram,” Idris publicly complained last weekend.
In
announcing the end of the offensive on Thursday, the army said its
troops had expelled jihadists from Chadian soil and had advanced deep
into Niger and Nigeria. Derby said he had warned those countries that
his forces would move out of bases seized there from the jihadists by
April 22, whether their armed forces moved in or not.
Army
spokesman, Colonel Azem Bermendoa Agouna, told the AFP news agency that
52 troops died during the operation, which was launched on March 31.
“A
thousand terrorists have been killed, 50 motorised canoes have been
destroyed,” Agouna said, referring to a large boat also called a
pirogue.
Agouna said the operation, which was launched after
nearly 100 soldiers were killed in a Boko Haram attack last month, ended
on Wednesday after the armed fighters were forced out of Chad.
It
was the first official snapshot of the outcome of Operation Bohoma
Anger, launched after about 98 soldiers were killed on March 23 in the
deadliest-ever attack by Boko Haram on the country’s military forces.
The armed group had mounted a seven-hour assault on a Chadian army base
at Bohoma.
The Chadian expedition and declarations of Derby
triggered a flurry of activities in Nigerian military circles. The
Defence Headquarters said on Tuesday that Chad would not take the glory
of Nigeria’s gallantry and contributions to the war against insurgency.
Coordinator of the Directorate of Defence Media Operations, Major
General John Enenche, said Nigeria was not slowing the pace of the war,
as claimed by Derby.
Enenche stated, “To say that we are slowing
down the war is not true at all. By our mandate, you can go in pursuit
of insurgents and criminals for 25 kilometres without consultation.
“For His Excellency (President Derby) to say that is not right. They are playing their part of the game. It’s not true.”
Enenche
said Nigeria fought in Sierra Leone and other countries where it left a
legacy of restoration of democratic rule and “somebody wants to take
glory with 30 men. When you are in a situation like this and it is
coming to an end, some people will be trying to take the glory. It is a
distraction for a military to say I’m taking the glory. We have done so
much there.”
Army Spokesman Col Sagir Musa had issued a statement
on Friday debunking claims that foreign troops were occupying Nigerian
territory.
Musa stated, “The Nigerian Army’s attention has been
drawn to the statement now circulating on social media claiming the
security and defence forces of Chad are deeply stationed in the islands
of Niger and Nigeria, waiting to handover to the respective armies of
these friendly nations. Nigerian Army wishes to state that there is no
Chadian or any other foreign country’s troops on Nigerian side of the
Lake Chad or in any other part of the Nigerian territory. As a
responsible organisation, the Nigerian Army finds it necessary to clear
the wrong impression or misinformation for history and posterity as well
as to avoid spreading falsehood and mischievous publications.”
The
army said regarding the Chadian onslaught on Boko Haram, “The operation
was especially welcomed and supported by the Nigerian Army because it
would deny the insurgent’s rear and logistics bases in Chad from where
they often plan and launched attacks into Nigeria. It is hoped that the
Chadian forces will sustain operations on their side of the border to
permanently deny Boko Haram criminals of rear bases from where they can
launch operations into Nigeria.”
The statement further declared,
“For the avoidance of doubt, the Chadian Operation Bohoma Wrath took
place only in Chadian territory and not on Nigerian territory. The
Chadian security and defence forces did not cross into Nigerian
territory during the operation and, thus, there are no Chadian troops
holding any Nigerian territory.
“The Nigerian military is fully
committed and in total support of the continued cooperation between
Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria to finally and speedily decimate Boko
Haram/ISWAP criminals and put final end to terrorism in the region.”
The
statement said, “Members of the public are requested to disregard the
claim and misleading information that the Chadian security and defence
forces are deeply stationed in the islands of Nigeria waiting to
handover.”
It also said the Chief of Army Staff, Lt General Tukur Buratai, had relocated to the North-east.
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