Nigeria to start withdrawing troops from Mali, says official
ABUJA: Nigeria will begin withdrawal of some of its troops from Mali because they are needed back home, where the country is battling a deadly Islamist insurgency, officials said.
It was not clear how many troops would be pulled from the west African nation, where Nigeria currently has some 1,000 troops, spokesman of the defence headquarters, Brigadier General Chris Olukolade said in a statement.
“The defence headquarters will commence the withdrawal of some Nigerian troops from the Peace Support Operations in Mali,” it said.
“The troops are mainly those not accommodated in the structures of the newly formed United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in Mali. They are to join the ongoing internal security operations in the country.”
The action followed “the rehatting and takeover” by the UN of the mission from Africanled International Support Mission in Mali”, it stated.
“Some of the soldiers will be redeployed
They are to join the ongoing internal security operations in the country. — BRIGADIER GENERAL CHRIS OLUKOLADE
immediately,” it added.
Nigeria will sustain its commitment and contribution to the Mali operation in other forms, such as input of “sizeable men and materials” to the mission, it said, without giving further details.
Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara, chair of the 15-nation west African bloc ECOWAS, told reporters earlier this month that the withdrawal was because Nigeria needed its soldiers back home.
“It’s because of the domestic situation,” Ouattara said after an ECOWAS summit in the Nigerian capital Abuja. — AFP