The United States will give
$40 million in humanitarian assistance to countries bordering Lake Chad
fighting Islamist militant group Boko Haram, U.S. ambassador to the United
Nations Samantha Power said on Tuesday.
The money was to help about
seven million people affected by the insurgent group that has killed around
15,000 people. It takes total U.S. aid to the sub-region since 2014 to $237
million, she said.
Power was in the capital of
Cameroon and met President Paul Biya and attended a ceremony to burn 2,000
tusks in a bid to end elephant poaching. The trip includes visits to Chad and
Nigeria.
“We discussed the monstrous
threat posed by Boko Haram and we agreed, and he was very forceful on this
point, that the military response alone could not succeed in defeating Boko
Haram in the long-term,” she said of her meeting with Biya.
Respect for human rights,
good governance, economic and forest development and a focus on civil society
were essential components of the campaign, she said.
Cameroon, Nigeria and Chad
are contributing forces to fight the group. Power has been scheduled to visit
the region’s Multinational Joint Task Force, which is staffed with troops from
the three nations as well as Niger and Benin.
The United States has sent
troops and drones and offered to send a special operations mission to the fight
against Boko Haram, which has pledged allegiance to Islamic State.
On Monday, a vehicle in her
motorcade that was carrying United Nations and Cameroonian officials struck a
young boy. Medics in the convoy treated him but he died of his injuries.
“I joined the (Cameroonian)
governor of the area … the leading U.N. official who manages the humanitarian
and development response and Ambassador Hoza, and we visited with the boy’s
family to offer our profound condolences,” Power said in a speech.
Power also described
meeting refugees and called for financial support from the international
community to aid the development of areas battered by Boko Haram.
(Reuters)

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