Trump administration set to release Boko Haram plan
The
Donald Trump administration is expected to reveal to lawmakers its
five-year plan to address the Boko Haram rebellion in North-east Nigeria
and the Lake Chad region.
ThisDay
Indication that the Trump administration will unveil its Boko Haram plan was contained in a notification letter addressed to the congresswoman by the U.S. Department of State.
Last
month, U.S. Senator Susan Collins and Wilson led a bipartisan group of
50 members of Congress in writing to the U.S. Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson, Secretary of Defence James Mattis, and Director of National
Intelligence Daniel Coats, requesting an update on their efforts to
counter Boko Haram.
In December 2016, legislation introduced by Collins and Wilson was signed into law requiring the U.S. government to develop a comprehensive
plan to help the Nigerian government and its partners combat Boko Haram
and address the legitimate concerns of affected, vulnerable
populations.
Collins
and Wilson’s legislation, which responded to the terrorist
organisation’s kidnapping of 276 schoolgirls in Nigeria in 2014, directs
the Secretary of State, Secretary of Defence, and the Director of
National Intelligence to submit to Congress a five-year anti-Boko Haram
strategy by June 12, 2017.
“While
we were encouraged by the release of 82 of the Chibok schoolgirls…, it
is imperative that we remember that many of the girls remain in
captivity along with untold hundreds of other women, men, and children
who have been kidnapped by Boko Haram,” Collins and Wilson wrote to
members of the administration.
“…We
look forward to receiving an update on your efforts to develop an
anti-Boko Haram strategy and beginning the process of dismantling Boko
Haram and reuniting all of the Chibok schoolgirls with their families.”
ThisDay
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