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Monday, May 26, 2014

John Kerry Claimed: US 'only' country helping to find Nigerian schoolgirls,

US secretary of state leaves allies bemused by saying no one else 'even offered' to help - as three British teams and one RAF spy plane join search.


John Kerry has caused bemusement by claiming that “only” America was helping to find the Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram and no other country had “even offered” to assist.
The US secretary of state spoke as three teams of British advisers worked in Nigeria to locate the 270 missing girls, aided by an RAF surveillance aircraft. One of those groups of officials is specifically charged with liaising with America.
France has also sent advisers to Nigeria and a summit took place in Paris last Saturday on the threat posed by Boko Haram. Israel and China have also offered to assist the search.
Nonetheless, Mr Kerry appears to believe the US is acting alone. During an event at the State Department marking the 90th anniversary of the creation of the American diplomatic service, Mr Kerry said: “Boko Haram, Nigeria – only the United States is there offering the assistance to help find those young women. Other countries not only aren’t they invited, but they didn’t even offer. That’s a difference, and I think it’s a difference worth dwelling on."
A Western diplomatic security source in Lagos, the Nigerian commercial capital, voiced dismay over Mr Kerry’s remarks. “It's all been pretty shambolic and careless on the Nigerian side,” he said. “If we now reckon coordination between the Americans and the Brits and the rest is also pretty poor, then we - and the schoolgirls - are much worse off than we’d thought."

The abduction of the schoolgirls on April 14 focused global attention on the suffering caused by Boko Haram, a radical Islamist movement based in northern Nigeria. Two days after Islamist fighters kidnapped the girls from their boarding school in Borno state, William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, condemned a “cowardly act” and offered to “help the Nigerian government ensure that these children can be returned to their families”

On April 18, Mr Hague agreed to send a team of British advisers during a phone call with Aminu Bashir Wali, the Nigerian foreign minister. This consisted of between eight and 10 officials, including specialists in counter-terrorism, hostage negotiation and victim support.

On May 14, David Cameron announced that a British military team would also go to Nigeria to “embed” in army headquarters. A third team of British officials would be sent to the country to liaise with America and “work with US experts to analyse information on the girls’ location”.

On the same day, President Goodluck Jonathan accepted Britain’s help during a meeting with Mark Simmonds, the Foreign Office minister responsible for Africa.

An RAF Sentinel reconnaissance plane was also dispatched, although it was delayed in Senegal by technical problems. The Ministry of Defence confirmed yesterday that the aircraft was now “operational” and helping the search from a base in Ghana.

“The UK and international partners are working with Nigeria in helping them secure the girls’ release,” said a Foreign Office spokesman, adding that all this assistance was being provided in coordination with America.
This joint effort, apparently invisible to the US secretary of state, may also encounter difficulties with Nigeria’s government

The country’s relatively small army of 62,000 personnel has been accused of boosting support for Boko Haram with a series of clumsy and bloodstained operations. More than 500 people died in March when soldiers opened fire on crowds during a mass escape from a prison in Maiduguri, a state capital in Boko Haram’s heartland.

Boko Haram may also be emboldened by the publicity surrounding the disappearance of the schoolgirls, warned Kyari Mohammed of the Centre for Peace Studies at Modibbo Adama University in Nigeria. “They have sleeper cells all over the northern part of the country and they're activating them,” he said. “We have succeeded in giving them the kind of profile that they didn't have. They are now a bigger player.

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