Nigeria to benefit as US provides additional $45m to battle insecurity
United States Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, on Tuesday said the US would provide an additional $45m to West African nations as part of the plan to battle instability.
This brings total funding under the year-old programme to nearly $300m, according to reports by AFP and Reuters.
In a four-nation tour of African democracies, Blinken met separately Tuesday with President Bola Tinubu and Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara.
The trip was to discuss US-African partnerships over trade, climate, infrastructure, health, security and other issues. It follows a summit in Washington with African leaders in December 2022.
Blinken sought progress combatting coups and extremism in West Africa in talks with two key leaders, as he pointed to Ivory Coast as a model.
AFP reports that while in Abidjan, Blinken hailed Ivory Coast’s stand against last year’s coup in Niger and its approach of “building security together” by investing economically to combat extremism in northern areas bordering Mali and Burkina Faso.
“I have to applaud the approach that’s been taken by Cote d’Ivoire – working with communities, listening to communities, making sure that their security forces understand the needs, the concerns of communities,” Blinken said.
“We spent a lot of time discussing mutual security challenges,” Blinken added.
“We appreciate Ivory Coast’s leadership in the fight against extremism and violence.”
“We have increased military training by 15 times and are investing in civil protection in Ivory Coast,” Blinken added, according to Reuters.
Blinken promised to boost cooperation on the ground with Ivory Coast, largely through training of its security forces.