Australian troops train African soldiers to fight Boko Haram
AUSTRALIAN
troops have been training African soldiers to fight Boko Haram, the
Islamic militant group responsible for a reign of terror in Nigeria.
Australian special forces took part in a three-week training stint in Niger, US military confirmed to The Australian.The training exercises, dubbed Flintlock, took place in late February at a military camp at Diffa, a town in Niger’s southeast near the border with Nigeria and in a region under threat from the terrorist group.
Meanwhile, Boko Haram jihadists were behind the killing of six farmers who were shot while working on their land near the northeastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri.
Gunmen on motorcycles attacked a group preparing fields for the rainy season outside the village of Amrawa, 16km from the Borno State capital, on Saturday.
The Defence Department had avoided an official announcement about the Diggers presence in Niger until questioned by The Australian yesterday, the paper reported. This is despite the US and Canada making public statements about their own soldiers’ role.
A Defence Department spokesman said it was the second time Australian troops had taken part in the Flintlock exercises. He described it as being “part of our regular international training engagements”.
“Such engagements allow the participants to broaden their professional experience and knowledge,” he said.
The group, whose name loosely translates as “Western education is forbidden”, made international headlines in 2010 with the kidnapping of 276 girls from Chibok, a town in Nigeria’s northeast. Boko Haram this month released 82 of the kidnapped girls.
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