President Muhammadu Buhari
will meet Donald Trump in Washington on April 30 to discuss issues including
“fighting terrorism” and economic growth, the White House announced Sunday.
“President Trump looks
forward to discussing ways to enhance our strategic partnership and advance our
shared priorities: promoting economic growth and reforms, fighting terrorism
and other threats to peace and security, and building on Nigeria’s role as a
democratic leader in the region,” the White House said in a statement.
“The relationship of the
United States with Nigeria is deep and strong, and Nigeria’s economic growth,
security, and leadership in Africa will advance our mutual prosperity.”
The announcement of the
visit comes one day after the fourth anniversary of the Chibok schoolgirls
abduction, which saw Boko Haram kidnap over 200 girls.
Some escaped in the
immediate aftermath and four years on, 112 are believed to still being held.
President Buhari’s White
House visit also follows a scandal that erupted in January when Trump allegedly
branded African nations “shithole countries.”
The reported remark
triggered global outrage and forced the US president to pen a letter
reaffirming his commitment to the continent.
Nigeria was among the
countries included on Trump’s ex-secretary of state Rex Tillerson’s Africa tour
last month — though the former Texas oilman cut short the trip just before the
US president sacked him.
Before returning to
Washington, Tillerson had notably promised Nigeria’s support ranging from
equipment to intelligence to helping secure the swift release of kidnapped
schoolgirls.
Buhari’s Re-election
Buhari, a 75-year-old
former general and one-time military head of state, announced earlier this
month he would seek re-election next year — a move that laid to rest months of
speculation over his health.
Buhari spent months in
London last year seeking medical treatment for an undisclosed illness.
If nominated, he faces the
Herculean task of convincing Nigerians he is the best candidate to steer the
country out of its worst recession in 25 years, after implementing a series of
unorthodox policies blamed for worsening the economic crisis.
He was voted into power in
2015 on a platform vowing to crack down on endemic graft and stamp out Boko
Haram.
Boko Haram still stages
deadly attacks on military and civilian targets despite Buhari’s insistence
that the group is “technically” defeated.
In February, the Islamists
embarrassed the government by driving unopposed into the northeastern town of
Dapchi and kidnapping over 100 schoolgirls.
Of the 111 who were
kidnapped, 105 were returned by the jihadists following a ceasefire agreement
with the government.
AFP
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