A long-awaited regional task force is set to begin raids on Boko Haram's last enclaves when the rainy season ends soon, the U.N.'s top official in West Africa said.
Nigerian and Chadian forces early this year forced
the militant group, which has sworn allegiance to Islamic State, to cede large swathes of territory in northern Nigeria, undermining its six-year campaign to carve out a caliphate.
But
some fighters have since regrouped and ramped up suicide attacks and
guerrilla raids in the remote border areas around Lake Chad where Chad, Niger, Cameroon and Nigeria meet.
"They will take advantage of the end of the rainy season now to really go after them," said Mohamed Ibn Chambas,
U.N. Special Representative for West Africa, in an interview on
Wednesday. The rains in northeast Nigeria typically end in September but
have lasted longer this year.
The 8,700-strong
joint force, headquartered in Chad's capital N'Djamena with troops from
Chad, Niger, Benin, Nigeria and Cameroon, was supposed to be fully
functional in July.
But plans were not finalised until late August, and some observers have bemoaned a lack of progress since.
The African Union and the Lake Chad Basin Commission
signed a memorandum of understanding in October giving final
implementation guidelines and the United States has sent troops to
provide intelligence and other assistance.
The
expected joint raids will have to adapt to the changing nature of the
enemy, which once attacked with hundreds of fighters aboard scores of
vehicles but has been reduced to isolated bands, Chambas said.
"There are still remote areas where they are hiding and they need to be physically flushed out," he said.
Two
such enclaves are Nigeria's Sambisa Forest, a vast former colonial
hunting reserve, and the rugged mountains straddling the
Nigeria-Cameroon border.
Individual national
armies continue to battle Boko Haram but there has been little sign of
joint operations for months. Chad's President Idriss Deby has indicated the force could begin operations this month.
Cooperation
has sometimes been hampered by communication problems between
English-speaking Nigeria and its francophone neighbours, but Chambas
said the situation had improved.
He added that a
purely military solution would not defeat Boko Haram, referring to the
deeper causes of radicalism such as unemployment and climate change on
the shrinking Lake Chad.
"You can't just physically eliminate Boko Haram and say the problem is gone," he said.
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