West African leaders consider new force to fight Boko Haram

Militants have killed thousands in past year in Nigeria-based campaign for Islamist state

Displaced people from Baga listen to President Goodluck Jonathan speaking in a camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria, on January 15th, 2015. Photograph:  /Olatunji Omirinolatunji Omirin/AFP/Getty Images
Displaced people from Baga listen to President Goodluck Jonathan speaking in a camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria, on January 15th, 2015. Photograph: /Olatunji Omirinolatunji Omirin/AFP/Getty Images

West African leaders are considering creating a military force to fight Nigeria's Boko Haram Islamist militants and will hold a regional summit next week to discuss the issue, Ghana's President John Mahama said on Friday.

Regional bloc Ecowas will seek the support of the African Union (AU) for its plans, said Mr Mahama.

"Nigeria is taking military action and Cameroon is fighting Boko Haram, but I think we are increasingly getting to the point where probably a regional or a multinational force is coming into consideration," Mr Mahama, who currently chairs Ecowas, told a news conference.

“It is what we want to discuss at the AU because, if that must happen, there must be a mandate to allow such a force to operate,” he said.

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Boko Haram militants have killed thousands of people in Nigeria in the last year as part of a campaign to establish an Islamist state there.

The group has also launched cross-border attacks into neighbouring Cameroon and Niger.

The group’s fighters seized the military base and town of Baga, in Nigeria on the shores of Lake Chad, on January 3rd.

Baga had been the headquarters of a multinational force with troops from Chad, Niger and Cameroon. Reuters