UN chief Ban Ki-moon wraps up visit to Nigeria

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has wrapped up his visit to Nigeria.
During a joint press conference with President Buhari, Ban not only spoke about the humanitarian situation in the North east of the country, but also about the Chibok girls, who were kidnapped by Boko Haram well over a year ago – and drew global attention.
Ban Ki-moon on Monday hailed Nigeria’s “greater stability and peace” under its new leader as he commemorated a deadly attack on the global body by Boko Haram militants.
The secretary-general hugged relatives of the victims of the 2011 bombing as he laid a wreath at United Nations House in the capital Abuja and praised “the extraordinary fortitude and determination” of the survivors.
“Our fallen colleagues and partners will be remembered this morning with a moment of silence in many places,” he said.
“But nowhere are the memories of these colleagues more immediate, more vivid and more compelling than here in Abuja. We will remember them forever as truly the best of humanity.”
Twenty-four people died when an explosives-rigged car exploded at UN House, the headquarters for around 400 employees, on August 26, 2011.
Radical Islamist sect Boko Haram, blamed for the deaths of at least 15,000 people during a six-year-insurgency, mainly in Nigeria’s northeast, claimed responsibility for the attack.
“The terrorists attacked the United Nations and destroyed the lives of many colleagues. But we have a mandate to build. To better the lives of people in need,” Ban said.
The government said in a statement it had assured Ban that repairs to the building would be completed within six months.
Ban met President Muhammadu Buhari after the ceremony, congratulating Nigeria on staging free and fair elections and saying he recognised the country’s “greater stability and peace” under its new leader.
“For the first time in Nigeria’s history, a sitting president peacefully ceded power to an opposition candidate in a democratic election,” he told a news conference after the meeting.”The election sent a strong global message of respect for democracy and the rule of law.”
Ban said he and Buhari had discussed development, human rights and peace and security, including “the troubling levels of violence and terror perpetrated by Boko Haram in northeastern Nigeria and beyond”.
Ban arrived in Abuja on Sunday, just hours after the military revealed suspected Boko Haram fighters had ambushed a convoy in the northeast carrying Nigeria’s army chief-of-staff Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai.
The officer was unharmed but one soldier and 10 militants died in the ensuing firefight, in Faljari village, east of Borno State capital Maiduguri, according to army spokesman Sani Usman.
Boko Haram has stepped up its attacks in Borno and two neighbouring states in its northeastern heartland since Buhari came to power on May 29.