Los Angeles Times

Obama hurts Nigeria’s pride

The president again leaves the country off his Africa trip itinerary

- By Robyn Dixon robyn.dixon@latimes.com

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa— Nigeria felt slighted when President Obama overlooked the vast nation on his first African trip as head of state in 2009, instead visiting its shrimp sized neighbor, Ghana, where he lauded the smaller country’s democratic achievemen­ts.

Obama left Nigeria out again in his 2013 visit to Africa. Now, as he prepares for his third and likely final trip to the continent as president, Nigeria is once more being bypassed in favor of Kenya and Ethiopia.

If democratic achievemen­ts play a role in the president’s itinerary, Nigerians may be wondering: Why?

In March, the vast and divided country of170 million staged one of the continent’s most significan­t elections— the country’s first democratic change of power since the end of military rule in1999.

In contrast, Ethiopia’s election in May sawthe ruling party, criticized by humanright­s organizati­ons for its oppression of opposition members, journalist­s, critics and bloggers, win every seat in the parliament.

Anindepend­ent democracy watchdog, Freedom House, described the Ethiopia vote as “far from free and fair.”

Yet Obama, who has placed great emphasis on humanright­s and democracy in Africa, will become the first sitting U.S. president to visit Ethiopia, this month, in amove criticized by rights groups.

Nigeria, the continent’s most populous country, is sub- Saharan Africa’s largest economy and an important source of oil for the United States. Its hurt pride at being left off Obama’s itinerary comes at a time of damaged relations between the two countries.

Attempts at military cooperatio­n in the fight against the Nigerian militant group Boko Haram crumbled toward the end of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s term. Jonathan was defeated in the March election by former military dictator Muhammadu Buhari.

There is a consolatio­n prize for Nigeria: On Monday, Obama hosts the new Nigerian president in Washington for talks on increased U. S. assistance in thewar against Boko Haram, an Islamic State- linked group with a horrific human rights record.

Boko Haram has been blamed for beheadings of civilians accused of being spies; attacks and killings of schoolboys and teachers; military- style attacks on villages in which hundreds of civilians have been shot, burned or slaughtere­d like goats; abductions and rapes of hundreds of women and girls; and bombings in crowded markets and bus stations.

The White House has described Buhari’s visit as marking “our support for the Nigerian people following their historic elections and peaceful transfer of power.”

U. S. officials have also indicated their willingnes­s to cooperate with Nigeria in its bid to recover billions of dollars in government funds looted by past officials and salted away in foreign bank accounts.

“President [ Obama] has long seen Nigeria as arguably the most important strategic country in sub-Saharan Africa. The question is would there be an opportunit­y to deepen our engagement and that opportunit­y is now,” said U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken, according to the Reuters news agency.

Given that, it’s not immediatel­y clear why Obama chose to leave Nigeria off his itinerary. Boko Haram may pose a security threat, but so does Shabab in Kenya. Nigeria’s record on corruption is poor, but so is Kenya’s. And Ethiopia is not nearly as free and democratic as Nigeria.

Akey factor maybe that the United States views East Africa overall as more important strategica­lly than West Africa. ( Kenya and Ethiopia are in the east, Nigeria in thewest.) And Kenya has personal resonance for Obama, whose father was born there.

Last year, Nigerian officials voiced anger over America’s refusal to sell Nigeria military helicopter­s seen as crucial in the fight against Boko Haram— a result of U.S. lawthat forbids sales of military equipment to countries whose military is implicated in gross rights abuses. When the U.S. offered to train a battalion, Nigerian officials rebuffed the teamof trainers sent to Nigeria’s capital, Abuja.

Ethiopia, meanwhile, gets about $ 800 million a year in U.S. military assistance and aid because of its role in the fight against the Somali militant group Shabab. Since taking power, Buhari has fired the top military commanders and promised to investigat­e humanright­s abuses exposed in a recent Amnesty Internatio­nal report, which accused the military of causing 8,000 deaths of Boko Haram suspects, rounded up arbitraril­y and kept in intolerabl­e conditions in military detention, lacking adequate food or water.

Buhari’s dismissals of service chiefs and pledge to take military abuses seriously may open theway to sales of military equipment and increased military cooperatio­n.

Hehas made defeating Boko Haram and restoring peace and stability in the northeast of the country his top priority, but the group, driven from many northern towns and villages at the end of Jonathan’s term, has regrouped, launching almost daily terrorist attacks in the north. In recent days, it unleashed a series of bombings at the end of Ramadan that killed at least 65 people.

One of the suicide bombings Friday was carried out by a girl who looked about10 years old, according to Nigerian army officials.

Buhari is confrontin­g a raft of other problems: a budget crisis, with teachers and public servants unpaid in some areas; entrenched corruption; and widespread inequality and poverty, particular­ly in the north, where the Boko Haram insurgency has been raging.

 ?? Sunday Alamba
Associated Press ?? IN A SORT of consolatio­n prize for Nigeria, President Obama is hosting Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, pictured in May, inWashingt­on for talks on increased U. S. assistance in the war against Boko Haram.
Sunday Alamba Associated Press IN A SORT of consolatio­n prize for Nigeria, President Obama is hosting Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, pictured in May, inWashingt­on for talks on increased U. S. assistance in the war against Boko Haram.

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