Nigeria is deploying 1,200 troops in Mali, where a war is raging to flush out insurgents from the North.
President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday got the Senate’s nod for the
deployment, which is to stave off the incursion of terrorists, who are
already troubling some northern states through the Boko Haram.
The President will today attend an extra-ordinary session of the
ECOWAS Heads of State and Government in Abidjan, Cote D’Ivoire, where
the regional block’s full troops deployment will be approved.
Dr. Jonathan will be accompanied by Defence Minister of State Mrs.
Olusola Obada and Chief of Defence Staff Admiral Ola Sa’ad Ibrahim.
Nigerian troops are to serve in the African-led International Support Mission to Mali (AFISMA) for “limited combat duties”.
Jonathan’s request for the Senate’s approval was contained in a
nine-paragraph letter entitled “Notification to the Senate on the
deployment of members of the Armed Forces on a limited combat duty to
Mali and request for consent”.
The January 16 letter was read by Senate President David Mark and debated by the lawmakers who gave their consent unanimously.
Jonathan said: “Having satisfied myself that our national security is
under imminent threat or danger as a result of the crises in northern
Mali, I, in consultation with the National Defence Council, approved the
deployment of a contingent of 1,200 members of the Armed Forces to
serve in the African-led force (AFISMA) in Mali for limited combat
duties.
“Nigeria is currently facing daunting security challenges and given
its proximity to the Sahel region, the crisis in Mali, if not brought
under control, may spill over to Nigeria and other West African
countries with negative consequences on our collective security,
political stability and development efforts.
“As a responsible member of the international community and given our
recent experiences with insurgency and terrorist activities, especially
in the northern parts of the country, I felt compelled to urgently
approve the deployment of Nigerian troops.
“The deployment of Nigerian troops is in line with Security Council
Resolution 2085(2012) and is necessitated by the need to combat armed
and terrorist groups, including Al-Qaida in the Islamic Magreb (AQIM)
and their activities, as well as proliferation of weapons from within
and outside the region with grave consequences on the security and
stability in the northern parts of Mali and beyond, including Nigeria.
“In view of the foregoing, the Senate of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria is respectfully invited to exercise its powers under Section
4(5) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as
(amended) and to consent to the deployment of a contingent of 1,200
members of the Armed Forces to serve in the African-led force (AFISM)in
Mali on limited combat duties.”
Jonathan invited the Senate to note the United Nation’s Security
Council’s concerns on the continuing deteriorating humanitarian and
security situation in the north of Mali, which is further complicated by
the presence and entrenchment of armed and terrorist groups, including
Al-Qaida in the Islamic Magreb (AQIM) and their activities; the
proliferation of weapons from within and outside the region; the
consequences of instability in the northern parts of Mali on the region
and beyond; and the need to respond swiftly to preserve stability across
the Sahel region.
He drew the attention of the Senate to the resolutions of the
Security Council on the crisis in Mali, particularly Resolution 2071
(2012), which declared its readiness to respond to Mali’s request for an
international military force; Mali’s request to the Economic Community
of West African States (ECOWAS) for military assistance, and ECOWAS
letter of 28th September 2012 to the UN Secretary General, requesting a
Security Council resolution authorising the deployment of a
stabilisation force in Mali under Chapter VII mandate of the United
Nations Charter.
He recalled that while unanimously adopting Resolution 2071 and
Resolution 2085, the Security Council called on member-states as well as
regional and international organisations to provide co-ordinated
support to the request of the Transitional Authorities of Mali regarding
an international military force assisting the Malian Armed Forces in
recovering the occupied regions in the north of Mali, including thorough
military training, provision of equipment and other forms of assistance
in efforts to combat terrorist and affiliated extremist groups.
He noted that ECOWAS had constituted a Working Group with the
responsibility of fashioning out the best way to implement Resolution
2085 of December 20, 2012, which endorsed the deployment of African-led
force (AFISMA), under the Chapter VII for the resolution of the
political and security crises in Mali .
Mark, who summed up contributions by senators on the request, said
Nigeria is not just a big brother in ECOWAS but a big brother in Africa.
He noted that this country should be concerned about what happens in
Africa, particularly if it will have ripple effects in Nigeria.
The Senate President said: “The situation in Mali is such that if we
don’t get involved, we will not be able to cope with the consequence of
it and I think it is on that basis we should act and act fast.
“I believe that the request is in order and our troops have performed
extremely well any time they have gone outside this country and I think
they are well equipped to move as quickly or to be deployed as quickly
as it is possible.
“One important thing is that because of the nature of the crises in
Mail and because of the characters involved, I strongly believe that if
we do not intervene, even on our own, the rest of the African countries
and a lot of the European countries will request that we intervene – for
obvious reasons.
“It is not just that the rebels want to take over in Bamako, I think
they also have a grand design to spread their tentacles well beyond the
boundaries of Mali and that is the more reason we should try and join
the other forces to nip it in the bud.”
He mandated the Committees on Defence and National Security to
monitor Mali to ensure that Nigerian troops there are well equipped,
well prepared and in a position to carry out the roles they have been
sent there to undertake.
Senator Olufemi Lanlehin, who supported the deployment of troops to Mali, noted that the measure is in Nigeria ’s self interest.
The lawmaker added that apart from deployment of troops to Mali , Nigerians should work to contain the activities of Boko Haram.
For Lanlehin, whatever it takes to contain and rout Boka Haram from the country should be done and done urgently.
He noted that the manifestation in northern Mali is that terrorist groups are pushing to engulf Nigeria.
“It is in our self interest to arrest the situation” he said.
Other Senators who contributed included Deputy Senate President Ike
Ekweremadu, Senators Magnus Abe, Victor Ndome-Egba, Abdul Ningi, Ayogu
Eze and Chris Anyanwu.
Also yesterday, Dr. Jonathan called for a more robust global response to terrorism.
He spoke after reviewing events in Algeria and Northern Mali with the
British High Commissioner to Nigeria, Mr. Andrew John Pocock.
President Jonathan, according to a statement by his spokesman, Dr.
Reuben Abati, said the world clearly needed to unite and do much more
than is presently being done to contain terrorism with its very negative
impact on global peace and security.
Jonathan also condemned Wednesday’s kidnapping of British, French and
other foreign workers at a gas facility in Eastern Algeria by
terrorists who claimed to be responding to France’s intervention in
Mali.
The President said Nigeria will continue to work hard with its
partners in the international community to ensure that terrorism is
vigorously rolled back across the world.
The President told Mr. Pocock that in furtherance of Nigeria’s
commitment to the war against terrorism in West Africa, Nigerian troops
had been deployed in Mali to join up with the multinational force
assembling there to restore Northern Mali to the control of the Malian
Government.
President Jonathan also received the Letters of Credence of the first
Ambassador of South Sudan to Nigeria, Mr. Parmena Mankuet Mangar.
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