Obama endorses Buhari's agenda for defeating group
Since Buhari's election, Washington has committed $5 million in new
support for a multi-national task force set up to fight Boko Haram.
Obama did not signal whether he might send U.S. troops to help train
Nigerian forces.
U.S. President Barack Obama on Monday offered strong support for Nigeria's new president, Muhammadu Buhari, saying he had a "clear agenda" for defeating the militant Islamist group Boko Haram and was working to root out corruption.
Speaking as he greeted Buhari on his first visit to the White House
since his election in March, Obama said the two leaders would discuss
ways to cooperate against the group, which has wreaked havoc in parts of
the West African country.
Obama told reporters in the Oval Office that Buhari has integrity and "a very clear agenda in defeating Boko Haram extremists of all sorts inside his country."
Boko
Haram has carried out multiple attacks in northern Nigeria, most
notably the April 2014 kidnapping of 276 Nigerian school girls who are
still missing.
The specific tactics Buhari will use against the group are still unknown, say experts who study the region.
White
House spokesman Josh Earnest said the United States could offer
intelligence to help the Nigerian efforts as well as support for
communities hurt by the group.
Buhari's election
was the first democratic power transition in decades, which Obama called
"an affirmation to Nigeria's commitment to democracy," and the visit is
meant to usher in a new chapter in relations between the two countries.
U.S.
cooperation with Buhari’s predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan, had virtually
ground to a halt over issues including his refusal to investigate
corruption and human rights abuses by the Nigerian military.
Buhari's
move on July 13 to fire military chiefs appointed by Jonathan clears
the way for more military cooperation, U.S. officials say.
Since
Buhari's election, Washington has committed $5 million in new support
for a multi-national task force set up to fight Boko Haram. Obama did
not signal whether he might send U.S. troops to help train Nigerian
forces.
The United States is also looking to
improve its economic ties with Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil producer,
especially as relations with two of Africa's other big powers, Egypt and
South Africa, have cooled.
Obama called Nigeria
one of the most important countries on the African continent and in the
world and he commended Buhari's work in rooting out corruption that he
said had held back Nigeria's economic growth.
Buhari
was also expected to meet with U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch
later on Monday to discuss countering violent extremism.
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