Yahoo – AFP,
Martin Zoutane, 17 Jan 2015
N'Djamena (AFP) - Tens of thousands of people joined a march in N'Djamena on Saturday in support of Chadian troops heading to Nigeria and Cameroon to fight the Islamist group Boko Haram.
![]() |
Chad's Prime
Minister Kalzeube Pahimi Deubet (C) leads a rally in N'Djamena
on January 17,
2015, showing support for a decision to send troops to fight
Nigeria's Boko
Haram Islamists (AFP Photo)
|
N'Djamena (AFP) - Tens of thousands of people joined a march in N'Djamena on Saturday in support of Chadian troops heading to Nigeria and Cameroon to fight the Islamist group Boko Haram.
Marching
some five kilometres (three miles) through Chad's capital, demonstrators waved
the national flag and chanted in French and Arabic: "Kick the forces of
evil out of our territory."
Prime
Minister Kalzeube Pahimi Deubet said the march sent "a strong signal, a
warning to Boko Haram".
The event
came as a huge convoy set off from N'Djamena to combat the Islamists sowing
terror in northeastern Nigeria and northern Cameroon.
Thousands
of people hailed the arrival of some 400 vehicles in the Cameroonian border
town of Kousseri, an AFP journalist reported.
Early this
month Boko Haram launched a full-scale assault on the strategic town of Baga on
the banks of Lake Chad, which straddles the borders of Chad, Nigeria, Niger and
Cameroon.
Chad is
part of a regional force against Boko Haram that was based in Baga -- but both
Chad and Niger had withdrawn their troops before the January 3 attack.
Chadian
President Idriss Deby said in a speech read by the speaker of parliament that
the new deployment aimed to recapture Baga.
But Nigeria
expressed lukewarm support fot the Chad mission on Saturday.
"All
support for our operations will be welcome, but it must conform with our own
ongoing operations," Nigerian army spokesman Chris Olukolade told AFP.
The
Cameroon government said on Monday that its army killed 143 Boko Haram fighters
who had attacked a military base in the northern town of Kolofata.
![]() |
People take
part in a rally in N'Djamena on January 17, 2015 to show their
support for a
decision to send troops to fight Nigeria's Boko Haram Islamists
(AFP Photo)
|
This week
French President Francois Hollande and US Secretary of State John Kerry accused
Boko Haram of committing crimes against humanity, while a top UN official,
Leila Zerrougui, called for a regional response to the crisis.
Ghanaian
President John Dramani Mahama, who heads the regional Economic Community of
West African States, called Friday for a "specific plan of action to end
the problem of terrorism" in Africa.
Satellite
pictures released by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch last week
showed around 3,700 buildings in Baga and nearby Doron Baga damaged or
destroyed.
Daniel
Eyre, Nigeria researcher for Amnesty International, said as many as 2,000
civilians may have been massacred, but Nigeria's army objected to the
"sensational" claims and said that the death toll in Baga was about
150.
Brutal
raids, massacres, suicide bomb attacks and kidnappings by Boko Haram have
claimed at least 13,000 lives and driven an estimated 1.5 million people from
their homes, mainly in northeastern Nigeria.
![]() |
File image
shows Chadian soldierson a pickup truck in the capital of the
Central African
Republic Bangui on April 4, 2014 (AFP Photo/Miguel Medina)
|
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