EU to give Sahel force funding boost

AFP  |  Brussels 

European leaders will today give a financial boost to a joint African force tackling jihadists in the at an international conference in Brussels, as fresh violence highlights the region's fraught security situation. The will announce 50 million euros (USD 61 million) for the G5 force at talks with heads of state from Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, and Niger, adding to around 280 million euros already pledged by international donors. The high-level meeting attended by French and German comes after two soldiers from France's counter-terrorism force in West were killed Wednesday when their vehicle struck a mine in It was the latest in a surge of attacks underscoring the challenge facing the five countries, among the poorest in the world, which are on the frontline of a war against Islamist militants. An EU warned of a "deteriorating security situation" in Mali, with "daily attacks". The G5 force needs more funds to help it reach its target of 5,000 properly trained and equipped troops to patrol hotspots and restore authority in lawless areas. As well as fighting militants, the force also tackles smuggling and that operate in the vast, remote areas on the margins of the The force has so far set up a headquarters and command structure and carried out two operations, with French support, in the troubled "tri-border" area where Mali, and meet. Intended to become fully operational in mid-2018, the G5 force operates alongside France's 4,000 troops in the area and the UN's 12,000-strong MINUSMA peacekeeping operation in "We expect in 2018 that we will be delivering more in terms of body armour, counter-IED material, trucks and even a hospital which will be built, we think, in later this year," an EU said. Today's conference in aims to secure more international funding for the force.

Donations so far have been led by Saudi Arabia, which has given 100 million euros. As well as 26 EU leaders and the United Nations, around a dozen other countries will be represented by foreign ministers including Saudi Arabia, Norway, and Macron's office said the fact so many countries were attending was "proof of the collective realisation of the Sahel's importance for the stability of and also Europe". "The priority is to keep the pressure up and develop the capacities of the national armies," a French presidential said, stressing that the G5 force was not an "exit strategy" for Operation Barkhane, France's anti-jihadist mission in the region. France, the former colonial power in the area, intervened militarily in in 2013 to help government forces drive al-Qaeda-linked jihadists out of the north. Within two weeks the Sunni radicals were flushed out of most urban areas but they continue to mount attacks from desert bases. Violence spread from northern to the centre and the south, and then spilled over into and Today, as the new force is starting to take shape, experts are warning that the jihadists are becoming more sophisticated in their operations.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 23 2018. 09:15 IST
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU