Nigeria's Buhari meets peers to hammer out Boko Haram force

By Julia Payne ABUJA (Reuters) - New Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari met his regional counterparts in Abuja on Thursday to set up a joint military force against Boko Haram, the latest sign of his intent to crush the Islamist militant group early in his tenure. The 72-year-old former military ruler, who was inaugurated just two weeks ago, welcomed the leaders of neighbouring Chad, Niger and Benin for the impromptu one-day summit at Abuja airport. Cameroon sent its defence minister. Entering the meeting, Buhari told reporters Abuja had pledged $100 million to setting up the force, which will be based in the Chad capital Ndjamena but headed by a Nigerian. However, in a sign of potential diplomatic tensions, he criticised joint proposals discussed among the different countries that would have force commanders rotating every six months. A rotation would hamper "the military capacity to sustain the push against the insurgents, who also have the uncanny ability to adapt and rejig their operational strategies," he said. Boko Haram has killed thousands and displaced 1.5 million people during a six-year insurgency aimed at establishing an Islamic state in Nigeria's impoverished northeast. Until the launch this year of offensives by Chad, Niger, Cameroon and Nigeria, the group, which has pledged allegiance to Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, occupied an area the size of Belgium. Squashing the insurgency was one of Buhari's main campaign promises, in contrast to his predecessor Goodluck Jonathan, who was accused of dithering and incompetence, particularly after the kidnapping of more than 200 girls from a school in the town of Chibok in April last year. CRACKS In his two weeks since assuming office, Buhari has focused on little else, travelling to Niger and Chad and shifting the military command centre from Abuja to Maiduguri, the capital of northeast Borno state and birthplace of the insurgency. In his absence, cracks have started to emerge in his All Progressives Congress (APC), a loose alliance of powerful Nigerians with little binding them together apart from a shared desire to eject Jonathan's People's Democratic Party (PDP) from power. Buhari, an ascetic northern Muslim, has named Yemi Osinbajo, a southern Christian lawyer from the commercial hub of Lagos, as his vice president but has failed to give any clarity on his eventual cabinet line-up. Although such delays are common in Nigeria's notoriously convoluted politics, analysts say it suggests disagreements and horse-trading between Buhari and Bola Tinubu, the Lagos political godfather who provides much of the APC's muscle. In another early set-back for Buhari, his choice for Senate president - the third most important position in the country - failed to win election after party rival Bukola Saraki broke ranks and secured enough PDP support to secure victory. Saraki's move provoked markedly conflicting responses from the APC. "The president took the view that a constitutional process has somewhat occurred," Buhari spokesman Femi Adesina said, a comment at odds with party spokesman Lai Mohammed, who accused Saraki of "the highest level of indiscipline and treachery". (Additional reporting by Felix Onuah and Alexis Akwagyiram; Writing by Ed Cropley; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)