New Nigerian general to head multinational Boko Haram fight

1FILE- In this file photo taken Friday, May 29, 2015, former General and Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari, arrives for his Inauguration at the eagle square in Abuja, Nigeria.
2Nigeria's new President Muhammadu Buhari makes his first official visit to one-time enemy Cameroon on Wednesday, July 29, 2015 to ease tensions and bolster support for a regional army to fight the Boko Haram Islamic uprising that is spilling across borders, his spokesman and Cameroon's defense minister said.
3LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) - Nigeria's Defense Ministry has appointed a new general to head the multinational army it is hoped can defeat the Boko Haram Islamic uprising that has killed 20,000 people and driven nearly 2 million from their homes.
4Thursday's appointment comes as the West African nation's new president promised deeper collaboration with neighboring states in the fight against Islamic extremism.
5President Muhammadu Buhari headed home Thursday after two days of talks in Cameroon focused on Boko Haram.
6Its attacks have spread across Nigeria's borders and forced tens of thousands of refugees to flee to neighboring states.
7Chad announced Thursday that its troops killed 13 Boko Haram fighters in attacks this week near Lake Chad, where militants slit the throats of three villagers.
8It said the extremists had kidnapped about 30 people, and spirited them away on speed boats.
9Nigeria's Defense Ministry said Maj. Gen. Iliyasu Isah Abbah will command the 8,700-strong four-nation army based in N'Djamena, Chad's capital.
10Buhari has said it is a disgrace that Nigeria needs foreign troops on its soil.
11But he noted before leaving Cameroon that "none of us can succeed alone."
12Relations with Cameroon have been strained by a long-simmering border dispute over the oil-rich Bakassi peninsula, but the two leaders agreed Thursday that demarcation of their border under U.N. auspices should be completed by year's end.
13Nigeria's military, poorly equipped with soldiers reporting going into battle without rations and just 30 bullets, last year allowed Boko Haram to take control of a large swath of the northeast.
14Chadian troops earlier this year forced the militants out of Nigerian border towns.
15Nigerian troops trained by South African mercenaries drove the extremists from most other towns.
16Buhari this month fired all the military's top commanders.
17The former chief of defense staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, complained in a retirement address Wednesday that "fifth columnists" in the military and security agencies have leaked information to the insurgents, causing the deaths of many troops ambushed by militants who had advance warning.
18Associated Press writer Dany Padire contributed to this report from N'Djamena, Chad.
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