Chad has withdrawn hundreds of troops from neighbouring
Niger, where they were helping local forces fight Boko Haram Islamist
militants, humanitarian sources and officials said.
The pull-out over
the past two weeks could weaken a region-wide struggle against the militants
who have killed tens of thousands of people, forced many more to flee and
triggered a humanitarian crisis.
There was no
immediate explanation or comment from defense officials in Chad. The move came
a month after the vast central African country complained about an unexpected
U.S. travel ban imposed on its nationals. Chad warned at the time the order
could affect its security commitments, which include its involvement in the
U.S.-backed fight against Boko Haram.
Residents said the
withdrawal had already had an impact on Niger’s Diffa region, which has seen a
string of attacks by Boko Haram militants crossing over from their base in
neighbouring Nigeria. Ibrahim Arimi from
the border village of Bosso said banditry had increased since the Chadian
troops started leaving and he had been temporarily moved to another village for
safety.
Diffa
parliamentarian Lamido Moumouni said residents had started complaining. “They have come to rely on the forces so
there is a perception that security will be lacking,” he said by telephone. At
its peak in 2016 after an attack in Bosso, Chad had 2,000 troops in Niger to
help counter Boko Haram although security sources said this has fallen
since. Boko Haram has attacked Chad, Niger and Cameroon from its base in
northeast Nigeria.
Its eight-year bid
to carve out an Islamist caliphate has driven millions from their homes, no
fewer than 200,000 of them are now based in Diffa, with little prospect of
returning home. Thousands of them are
camped alongside an unfinished highway in the middle of a barren savannah with
few resources. Chad’s soldiers also occupy front-line positions in a
peacekeeping force in northern Mali. Analysts say falling oil revenues after
the price crash in 2014 has also sapped Chad’s appetite for expensive regional
security commitments. (Reuters/NAN)


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