The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Nigerian president’s US visit to focus on security, economy

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LAGOS: Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari is to meet President Donald Trump in Washington today, the firstAfric­an leader to be received by Trump’s White House administra­tion.

All eyes will be on Trump after he earlier called African nations ‘shithole’ countries, a damaging remark he has since denied.

Trump’s relationsh­ip with the continent suffered a further setback in March when former secretary of state Rex Tillerson was fired while in Nigeria on his first trip to the continent.

As a result, the visit revealed little about Trump’s Africa policy.

Buhari’s visit comes after Trump met German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Friday and French President Emmanuel Macron last week to discuss the contentiou­s Iran nuclear deal and biting trade sanctions.

According to a White House statement, the talks will focus on fighting terrorism and insecurity, economic growth and democratic developmen­t in Nigeria, set to hold presidenti­al polls in February next year.

Nigeria is entering its ninth year fighting Boko Haram extremists, who have devastated the northeast of the country and killed over 20,000 people in a bloody quest to establish an Islamist state.

Buhari is also battling a socalled herdsmen crisis, a sectarian conflict hardening along religious lines that has claimed scores of lives this year in escalating violence.

“I think both sides have a clear agenda in this meeting and it’s security and economic issues.

“They both have something to gain,” J Peter Pham, director of the Africa Centre at the Washington­based Atlantic Council, told AFP.

“On President Trump’s side, it’s definitely putting that controvers­y behind him,” Pham said.

“On President Buhari’s side, it’s having the prominence of being the first African leader received at the White House in this administra­tion.”

In spite of Trump’s remarks, Nigeria’s relationsh­ip with the United States has improved since he came into office, according to Lauren Blanchard, African affairs specialist with the Congressio­nal Research Service.

“(The visit) is intended to signal that the United States continues to see Nigeria as one of its most important partners on the continent,” Blanchard said.

“Cooperatio­n has improved over the course of President Buhari’s tenure but not as fast as both sides would like,” she added.

Buhari, who like Trump has a tendency to make gaffes, had lambasted former President Barack Obama shortly after coming into office for refusing to sell Nigeria weapons to fight Boko Haram.

“Unwittingl­y, and I dare say unintentio­nally, the applicatio­n of the Leahy Law Amendment by the United States government has aided and abetted the Boko Haram terrorists,” Buhari said during a visit to Washington.

Under the legislatio­n, the US is prevented from offering weapons or training to countries where there is credible informatio­n of human rights abuses by authoritie­s.

In contrast, Trump’s administra­tion has gone ahead with the reported 496 million sale of up to a dozen Super Tucano aircraft, a plane with surveillan­ce and attack capabiliti­es, set to be delivered in 2020.

The deal has recently come under scrutiny in Nigeria, a country with endemic corruption, where lawmakers are accusing the president of illegally withdrawin­g funds to purchase the planes.

While no major trade announceme­nts are expected, Trump and Buhari will also be talking about ways to deepen economic cooperatio­n.

“There is the security element and the economic element that dovetails with Trump’s agenda to push American business,” said Pham. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows men on camels cross the water as a woman washes clothes in Lake Chad in Ngouboua. — Reuters photo
File photo shows men on camels cross the water as a woman washes clothes in Lake Chad in Ngouboua. — Reuters photo

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