US$47mil to fight terrorism
France goes big in training efforts and equipment to face militants
France goes big in training efforts, equipment to face militants.
DAKAR: France plans to invest US$47mil (RM190mil) to help countries of Africa’s Sahel region prepare to face militants attacks similar to those that killed dozens in Paris in 2015, announced an interior ministry official.
The Sahel, a politically fragile region whose remote desert spaces host a medley of militants groups, is seen as vulnerable to further attacks after strikes on soft targets in Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast earlier this year.
Nearby Senegal, a Western security partner with a long history of stability, has so far been spared.
“In future we will train all the countries of the G5 Sahel and Senegal with US$47mil in financing, including US$27mil (RM110mil) for equipment,” said a spokeswoman for Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve during his visit to Dakar which started on Friday.
G5 Sahel is a regional security organisation composed of Chad, Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali and Mauritania.
The investment period is 20172022 to at least 14 countries in the region, the spokeswoman added.
French riot control officers from the CRS are currently in Senegal for a month training Senegalese police forces to combat urban attacks on soft targets ahead of the broader programme.
In the simulation exercise watched by Cazeneuve as well as army elites and foreign diplomats, Senegalese police arrived swiftly on the scene after masked militants killed three students before holing up with hostages inside a university bus.
The militants were killed and the remaining hostages released and given medical treatment in the drill.
“We have reinforced police cooperation so that the first ones on the scene, the specialised forces, can intervene in case of mass murder with a highly efficient response,” said Cazeneuve in a speech shortly after the demonstration.
Cazeneuve also added that the decision expands on already established intelligence agreements to fight extremism, looking to include more countries to help secure borders, exchange intelligence and foster cooperation between special and local security forces in the region.
Former colonial power France retains a military presence in Senegal with 350 soldiers.
A much larger force of 3,500 is spread across Chad, Mauritania, Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso to hunt down militants.
Senegal’s ally the United States has also boosted military cooperation with the country and this year signed a cooperation agreement to ease the deployment of American troops there.— Reuters
We have reinforced police cooperation so that the first ones on the scene, the specialised forces, can intervene in case of mass murder. Bernard Cazeneuve