Cameroon
has deployed about 1,000 troops and armoured vehicles to its border
region with Nigeria as it steps up its military presence to counter a
rising threat from Boko Haram Islamist militants.
Spokesman
of the Cameroonian Ministry of Defence, Lieutenant-Colonel Didier
Badjeck, said that about 1,000 Special Forces of Cameroon’s Rapid
Intervention Brigade (BIR) left the capital on Monday.
Lieutenant Badjeck added that several new generation armored vehicles were deployed three days earlier.
The
Cameroon Defence Spokesman added that their mission would be to carry
out reconnaissance and be ready to respond with enough fire power.
According
to Lieutenant Badjeck, the deployment is part of Cameroon’s effort to
increase its military presence in the border region.
The
Nigerian President, Goodluck Jonathan, had flown to Pretoria, South
Africa on Friday, May 23 for high-level discussions with other African
Heads of State and Government on combating terrorism in Africa.
The
Government has been under pressure from Nigerians seeking a solution to
the state of insecurity in the country, particularly since the
abduction of over 200 schoolgirls from Government Secondary School,
Chibok, Borno State by the Boko Haram sect.
The abduction of the
schoolgirls has drawn wide condemnation from the international
community, with some countries offering support in the search for the
girls.
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