Terrorism file at top of French PM's talks in Chad
The turbulent situation in the Lake Chad region, located in
the central part of the African Sahel and surrounded by Chad, Cameroon, Nigeria
and Niger, as a result of the terrorist operations carried out by the Nigerian
terrorist group Boko Haram, has led to growing French concern, as it has the
largest presence in the region as a whole. French Prime Minister Jean Castex
visited Chad on Thursday, December 31, 2020, where he visited the French
Barkhane forces combating terrorist groups in the region.
“We have had fruitful and in-depth discussions,” said
Castex, who was received by Chadian President Idriss Deby, adding, “We have
discussed ways to enhance cooperation between France and Chad in order to
achieve a common goal, which is to fight terrorism, whether in the Sahel region
against ISIS and al-Qaeda or in the Lake Chad region against Boko Haram.
Among the thorny issues that were touched upon in the
French-Chadian talks was the future of the French military deployment in the
Sahel region after the killing of three soldiers in Mali last week when an
improvised explosive device exploded. Castex honored the victims in a speech he
delivered at the Barkhane Force command center in the capital, N'Djamena.
It should be noted that the Chief of Staff of the French
Armies, General Francois Lecointre, announced that his country is seriously
considering withdrawing its forces from the Sahel region.
Lecointre explained that it is likely that France will
partially withdraw its forces in the coming days or weeks, according to the
French newspaper Le Monde.
The French presidency announced that clear directives will
be issued during a summit to be held in early 2021 in N'Djamena that will bring
together France and its partners in the G5 Sahel countries involved in the
fight against terrorism, namely Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, Mauritania and Chad.
This summit will be held on the first anniversary of the Pau
summit, which has redefined the objectives in the common border region between
Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso, with many tactical successes, especially against
ISIS.
France refuses to talk about any liberation from the commitment
to combat terrorism, but it is counting on strengthening the local forces,
which could allow it to return the 600 troops who were reinforced this year.
Since the beginning of 2020, Boko Haram has carried out many
operations, perhaps the most prominent of which is the suicide bombing in the
far north of Cameroon near the border with Nigeria on September 4, 2020, which
resulted in the killing of seven civilians and the wounding of 14 others, and
it launched an attack on a village bordering Nigeria on August 3, killing 18
civilians and injuring 11 others.
Boko Haram also launched terrorist attacks on various towns
in the northernmost provinces of Cameroon on February 16, 2020, and these
attacks caused material losses that affected vital facilities inside these
towns, as well as the attack on a village in northern Cameroon on February 4,
2020, in which many homes were torched and two civilians were killed.



