The United States of America will send a team to 
Nigeria in the next few weeks to discuss with the new government ways to
 renew cooperation in the fight against the Islamist militant group Boko
 Haram, a senior U.S. diplomat said on Thursday.
Washington
 has quickly reached out to new President Muhammadu Buhari since his 
election victory in March and sent U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry to
 his inauguration last week to underscore U.S. interest in working with 
his government.
Tensions emerged between the former 
government of President Goodluck Jonathan and the Obama administration 
last year over corruption and human rights abuses by the Nigerian 
military in its campaign to crush Boko Haram.
In
 his inauguration speech, Buhari vowed to defeat Boko Haram and called 
the group, which pledged allegiance to the Islamic State in Syria and 
Iraq in March, “mindless” and “godless.”
“With
 the new government we are optimistic we can reset the relationship,” 
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Africa, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, 
told a congressional hearing. “We want to work with him and have 
expressed that to him.”
She said Buhari
 had committed both publicly and privately to “do everything possible to
 address the situation in terms of resources and staff” to tackle Boko 
Haram, which launched its insurgency in 2009.
U.S.
 officials have said the United States could send more advisers to 
Nigeria to train its military and help boost the economy, the largest in
 Africa, through more investment in its oil and gas sector.
Thomas-Greenfield
 said the United States was encouraged that Buhari’s first trips were to
 neighbours Niger and Chad, which are part of a multi-national force 
being set up to fight Boko Haram’s insurgency in the Lake Chad region.
Nigeria’s
 Major-General Tukur Buratai has been appointed to head the new force, 
which will be funded partly by the international community.
“He
 is someone we have worked with and someone we feel will be a positive 
force on the multinational task force,” she said, adding that Buhari was
 still studying options to fund a stepped- up effort to tackle Boko 
Haram.
Analysts say the challenge for 
the United States is to work with Buhari while giving him time to 
address problems in the Nigerian military.
A
 report by rights group Amnesty International this week reinforced U.S. 
concerns over human rights abuses by Nigerian security forces.
In
 a 133-page report issued on Wednesday, Amnesty said more than 8,000 
people died while being held prisoner by the army in the campaign 
against Boko Haram, many of them murdered, starved or tortured.
Amnesty
 said many of the prisoners, including boys as young as nine years old, 
were rounded up in Boko Haram strongholds and shot dead while inside 
detention facilities.
Source:
The Globe and Mail 
 
 
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