Tag: ECOWAS

  • Ìgbésùnmọ̀mí: Àjọ ECOWAS fẹ́ẹ́ ṣèrànwọ́ fún ilẹ̀ Nàíjíríà

    Ìgbésùnmọ̀mí: Àjọ ECOWAS fẹ́ẹ́ ṣèrànwọ́ fún ilẹ̀ Nàíjíríà

    Kayọde Ọmọtọṣọ

    Ajọ iṣọkan ọrọ aje ilẹ Adulawọ, iyẹn ECOWAS, ti ṣetan lati dide iranwọ fun orileede Naijiria ati awọn ilẹ Adulawọ mi-in lati gbogun ti iwa igbesunmọmi nilẹ Adulawọ, pẹlu iranwọ ikọ ologun ti ajọ ọhun yoo dasilẹ. Koda, biliọnu meji ataabọ Dọla ni wọn ti ko jọ lati fi ṣe idasilẹ ikọ ologun naa. Kọmisanna ajọ naa to n ri sọrọ to jẹ mọ oṣelu ati eto aabo, Abdel-Fatau Musah, lo sọ eleyii di mimọ niluu Abuja, lanaa.

    O ni “ti ẹ ba wo agbegbe wa, iwa igbesunmọmi ti gbilẹ si i. Lonii, orileede Burkinafaso ti n ṣaaju Afghanistan gẹgẹ bi orileede ti iwa igbesunmọmi ti gbilẹ lagbaaye, ti ilẹ Adulawọ si ti di ile fun awọn agbesunmọmi. Iyalẹnu lo jẹ fun wa pe ọkan ninu orileede to jẹ ẹgbẹ wa le maa koju iwa igbesunmọmi. Ti iru eyi ba fi le ṣẹlẹ ni orileede kan, o tumọ si pe awọn orileede yooku ko gbọdọ sun asunpiye. A ti iru itu ti wọn pa ni awọn orileede kan bii Benin, Togo, Ghana ati Cote d’voire.”

       Musah waa ni inu oun dun fun bi ijọba ilẹ Naijiria ṣe ṣẹgun ikọ Boko Haram ti awọn naa fẹẹ sọ ara wọn di kanranjangbọn, ti wọn si sọ ikọ ọhun di ẹdun arinlẹ.

  • ECOWAS force to battle terrorism in Nigeria, others

    ECOWAS force to battle terrorism in Nigeria, others

    • Sub-regional body sourcing $2.4b to raise counter-terrorism troops

    Nigeria and other West African countries battling terrorism will receive support from a standby force to be formed by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

    The regional economic block expressed worries about the deepening terrorism in the Sahel region.

    It unveiled plans yesterday to raise $2.4 billion for the establishment of the standby force.

    ECOWAS Commissioner in charge of Political Affairs, Peace and Security, Ambassador Abdel-Fatau Musah, broke the news in Abuja yesterday.

    He said: “If you look at our region, it is being ravaged by terrorists. Today, Burkina Faso has overtaken Afghanistan as the most-terrorised state on earth and Africa has become home to terrorist organisations.

    “Elsewhere in the world, there are opportunistic terrorists attacks like we saw in some countries not too long ago.

    “We are faced with the nightmare of having one of our member states being completely occupied by terrorist groups.

    “If they set up a front base in one country then no country is safe, and we have already seen the impact of that on some of the coastal countries –  Benin, Togo, Ghana and Cote d’voire– over the past few years.”

    The ECOWAS commissioner, however, said Nigeria has been able to degrade the Boko Haram terrorists.

    “In Nigeria, thanks to the efforts of the Nigerian Government, Boko Haram has been degraded to the extent that they do not post a sustainable threat to the peace and security of Nigeria,” he said.

    Musah spoke at the opening of a three-day consultative meeting of Commandants of the three designated ECOWAS Training Centres of Excellence.

    The three centres of excellence are the National Defence College (Nigeria); Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (Ghana) and Ecole de Maintien de la Paix Alioune Blondin Beye (Mali).

    The consultative engagement is a bi-annual event coordinated by the Directorate of Peacekeeping and Regional Security of ECOWAS.

    It is to support training, capacity building, research and development of the ECOWAS Standby Force and the general peace and security within the sub-region.

    But Mali, which is housing one of the training centres of excellence, was not at the meeting yesterday.

    Mali’s absence may not be unconnected with its recent decision alongside Niger and Burkina Faso to pull out of the ECOWAS community.

    Musah said that terrorism was cascading across the region and there was need to have counter-terrorism forces to contain its spread.

    Read Also: Foreigners earning more from mining than Nigerians, says Akpabio

    Musah added: “This is the decision, and in the coming weeks, ECOWAS has already, with the Chiefs of Defence Staff, developed operational modalities, the concept of operations and everything for us to aggregate.

    “It will be something like an advance and rapid reaction force of a battalion that will be able to confront terrorists’ bases.”

    He explained that as part of the resolution of the authority of Heads of States, 2.4 billion dollars would be raised to fund the ECOWAS standby force to tackle the security challenges headlong.

    “The Heads of States have decided that on the first year, we must raise about $2.4 billion to support the operation of this force in order to face the terrorist.”

    Musah said that out of the amount, the Heads of States had directed member-states to contribute $1 billion to begin the operation of the standby force.

    He also explained that Ministers of Defence and Finance from the sub-region would be meeting to fashion out funding modalities for the force.

    The Commandant, National Defence College, Rear Admiral Olumuyiwa Olotu, said West Africa remained the only region that assigned training centres with special mandate.

    He urged participants to take advantage of the opportunity to exchange useful ideas to step up the counter-terrorist campaign.

  • ECOWAS deploys 40 observers for Togo’s parliamentry, regional elections

    ECOWAS deploys 40 observers for Togo’s parliamentry, regional elections

    No fewer than 40 observers have been deployed by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to Togo, ahead of the parliamentary and regional election.

    The elections have been scheduled for 29 April 2024. 

    This was revealed in a statement by the regional body. 

    The statement reads: “The President of the Economic Community of West African States ( ECOWAS) Commission, Dr Omar Alieu Touray, has deployed an Election Observation Mission of forty (40) observers to Togo to monitor the legislative and regional elections scheduled for 29 April 2024.

    “This mission is in line with the provisions of Article 12 of the ECOWAS Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance and constitutes support from the regional organisation to its Member States for the conduct of their elections. The mission is led by the former Vice-President of The Gambia, Mrs Fatoumata Jallow-Tambajang. 

    Read Also: ICC shutdown: ECOWAS, FCT working to restore normalcy to parliament’s operations

    “The mission is made up of Ambassadors from Member States accredited to ECOWAS; representatives of the ECOWAS Court of Justice and Parliament; Civil Society Organisations; media professionals and election observation specialists from the West African region.

    “This observation mission is being deployed following the recommendations of a pre-election fact-finding mission that visited Togo from 15 to 20 April 2024 to assess the preparatory phases of the elections. 

    “During its stay in Togo, the observation mission will hold consultations with the main stakeholders in the electoral process and monitor the voting process up to 29 April 2024.”

  • ECOWAS logjam worsens

    ECOWAS logjam worsens

    The disillusioning news from Mali indicating a ban on politics and a further ban on the media reporting political parties was followed hard by Burkina Faso suspending the reportorial activities of some French and American news media. Both countries, like Niger Republic, are governed by military juntas, and all three had in January announced their withdrawal from the Economic Community of West Africa States (ECOWAS), thus forcing the regional body to climb down over its threat to sanction or even invade them in order to reinstate democracy.

    The Malian ban was inspired by a desire to curb the rising calls for a return to party politics and elections. Burkina Faso also faces the same agitation. But both military juntas had received rapturous welcome from undiscerning public too naïve to understand the nature of military governments, particularly their autocratic predilections and abuse of human rights. Now they know. ECOWAS knew better, but desperately made unilateral concessions to the three countries in order to save the unity of the regional body. This column had denounced the rapprochement, insisting that the military juntas would not change, nor meet the regional body half way.

    Read Also: Nigeria urges AU, ECOWAS to mitigate regional conflicts

    It is a tragedy that despite years of brutal and inept military rule in Nigeria, some misguided Nigerians tried to instigate a coup d’etat to abort the February 2023 elections. Had a coup been carried out, it would have doomed the Fourth Republic and probably doomed Nigeria itself. But some people never learn from history. In retrospect, ECOWAS should have waited a little longer before making hasty, unrequited concessions to the renegade three. From all indications, the three countries will soon unravel naturally at perhaps a greater cost to the coup-loving people of those beleaguered countries.  

  • ICC shutdown: ECOWAS, FCT working to restore normalcy to parliament’s operations

    ICC shutdown: ECOWAS, FCT working to restore normalcy to parliament’s operations

    The Parliament of the Economic Community of West African States yesterday  said it was working closely with the Federal Capital Territory authorities on restoration of normalcy to the Parliament’s operations.

    Operations of the regional parliament have been negatively impacted upon by the temporary shutdown of the Abuja International Conference Centre (ICC).

    A statement by the parliament’s communication department said the regional body has established talks with the FCT authorities.

    The statement reads: “The ECOWAS Parliament is working assiduously with the relevant authorities of Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory, to restore the normal order of its work environment, following the temporary shutting down of the Abuja International Conference Centre (I.C.C).

     “The shut-down situation which is on the instructions of the Federal Government of Nigeria, has led to the ECOWAS Parliament’s operations being negatively impacted.

    Read Also; I survived fighting Boko-Haram, Niger Delta militants, IPOB – Anambra CP

    “The Parliament maintains some shared services with the Abuja I.C.C. such as electricity supply and some leased office spaces which serve as annexes to the Parliament. Nonetheless, the recent erratic general state of affairs in power supply has caused the Parliament to experience power disruptions during work hours, owing to the absence of the I.C.C. power generator personnel engaged to man the service.

    “It may also have been observed that the I.C.C shut-down also triggered the deployment of a new security management at its main entrance as well as the demarcation of the I.C.C –ECOWAS Parliament facilities with a temporary perimeter fencing, whereas hitherto, they had seamless boundary separating the two

    facilities. 

    “As Parliament has established talks with the FCT authorities, it can safely infer that these measures put in

    place by its host authorities are to facilitate the impending rehabilitation exercise being planned for the I.C.C.

    facility. It was not intended to cause any disruptions and inconveniences for the Parliament.

    “To this extent, ECOWAS Parliament is hereby, reassuring all its stakeholders that discussions are ongoing with its host, with a view to ensure that its operations are smooth, with the least possible interruptions.”

  • Nigeria urges AU, ECOWAS to mitigate regional conflicts

    Nigeria urges AU, ECOWAS to mitigate regional conflicts

    Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to ECOWAS, Amb. Musa Nuhu, has called on the African Union (AU) and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to harmonise strategies towards mitigating regional conflicts.

    Amb. Nuhu made this known at the maiden joint consultation meeting yesterday between the AU Peace and Security Council (PSC) and ECOWAS Mediation and Security Council (MSC) in Abuja.

    The Chairman, ECOWAS MSC, described the meeting as a key turning point in Africa’s collective pursuit of peace and prosperity, stressing that “for long, the continent had struggled with security challenges that brought untold hardship to its people.”

    Read Also: Former ECOWAS Court of Justice VP criticises EFCC chairman’s briefing on Yahaya Bello

    “From terrorism and violent extremism to unconstitutional changes of government, these challenges demand a unified response that goes beyond our national boundaries and requires collective efforts.

    “Therefore, these joint consultative engagements between the AU and Regional Economic Communities (RECs) serve as an important platform for forging such a collective response to mitigate these challenges.

    “This is in tandem with the tenets of Article 16 of the PSC Protocol, to harmonise the activities of Regional Mechanisms towards promoting peace, security and stability in Africa,” he said.

  • Why women, youth must be involved in search of peace, security, by ECOWAS commission

    Why women, youth must be involved in search of peace, security, by ECOWAS commission

    The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on Monday, April 22, explained why women, children, and youth must be involved in the search for peace and security in the region.

    Sintiki Tarfa-ugbe, the director of Humanitarian and Social Affairs of the ECOWAS commission, said it would be difficult to address the issue without “these set of people because they are mostly affected.”

    Tarfa-ugbe spoke in Abuja at the 2024 first annual meeting of the ECOWAS Women Peace and Security regional steering group with the theme: Sustaining the momentum towards monitoring and reporting on women, peace, and security agenda using the continental results framework (CRF).

    She said for long the issue of security and peace have been left in the hands of other people while the women, children and youth have been silent.

    She therefore said it is time for their voices to be heard.

    Tarfa-ugbe said: “For us as ECOWAS Commission, peace and security is an important pillar of development. And we can’t talk about peace and security without women and children and the youth.

    “Part of our work as ECOWAS Commission is to continue to promote the inclusivity of women, children and youth in the peace and security and stability agenda of the region.

    “We are here with representatives of the 15 member states to report to us on what they are doing and what are the challenges and how we can consolidate on addressing the peace and security issues.

    “We don’t want the agenda to be dominated by people who are not affected by the issues.

    “Women and children are the ones who are affected by the issue,  we want their voices to be heard on the table.

    She stressed that the various representations show how important the meeting was.

    “Today you can see that the Commissioner of Human Development and Social Affairs, Prof. Sarr, as the representative of the Ecowas president is here and also the Minister for Women Affairs and Social Development, Uju Kennedy-Ohanenye representing the Nigerian government.

    “And you know Nigeria is the Chair of ECOWAS and she has demonstrated that she’s ready to push the agenda but not push the agenda as policy talk but an action talk and we will continue that engagement with the members state and Nigeria moving forward.”

    On her part, Prof. Fatou Sow Sarr, Commissioner of Human Development and Social Affairs, said the meeting of the critical importance women play in ensuring the sustainability of peace processes and resolutions of conflict.

    She said that the meeting is meant to help strategize and plan for the future

     “As we gather here, we are reminded of the critical importance of advancing the women, peace and security agenda in our region, with the understanding that peace and security are fundamental pillars for development and prosperity, and women play an indispensable role in ensuring the sustainability of peace processes and resolutions of conflict.

    “In this workshop, we aim not only to exchange knowledge and experience but also to strategize and plan for the future. The continental results framework provides us with a roadmap, a guiding light towards achieving our collective goals in advancing the agenda by aligning our efforts with this framework, we can enhance coordination, cooperation and accountability across Ecowas member states in implementing the WPS agenda

    “We must recognize that achieving meaningful progress requires concerted action at all levels from grassroots communities to regional and continental institutions as such, today we have the opportunity to dialogue share knowledge and further build our capacity to overcome challenges and capitalize on opportunities in advancing the women peace and security agenda.

    Read Also: ECOWAS splashes $26.2m on humanitarian activities from 2023 to 2024 – Commissioner

    “Ladies and gentlemen you will all  agree that together we represent a diverse array of backgrounds expertise and perspectives, it is this diversity that will enrich our discussion and enable us to explore innovative approaches to strategies and address the challenges ahead as we embark on this journey together let us remain mindful of the significance of our task and reaffirm our commitment to promoting the meaningful participation of women in decisions Glenda perspective into all aspects of peace and security initiatives

    “The stakes are high but so is our determination let us harness the collective energy and commitment in this room to drive real tangible progress towards a more peaceful inclusive and equitable region for all.”

  • ECOWAS splashes $26.2m on humanitarian activities from 2023 to 2024 – Commissioner

    ECOWAS splashes $26.2m on humanitarian activities from 2023 to 2024 – Commissioner

    The Economic Community of West African States, Friday, said it has splashed $26 million on humanitarian activities within the region between 2023 and 2024.

    Besides, the regional body said it also supported sport federations with $100,000 each per year.

    In the area of youth innovation, the Commissioner for Human Development and Social Affairs, Professor Fatou Sow Sarr, said the regional body start-ups in scientific innovation with the sum of $50,000.

    Sarr, who made the disclosure at the ECOWAS weekly briefing in Abuja, said a total of $700,000 was used for the training of 30 young people from the region in Masters and PHD programmes.

    She also revealed that countries under sanctions were not excluded from the humanitarian gesture of the regional body.

    She stressed that ECOWAS puts significant resources into the humanitarian sector for displaced people, migration, floods and various forms of disaster:

    Read Also: Tinubu appoints new Board for NAICOM

    She said, “Guinea under sanctions received nearly 600,000 dollars in January 2024, namely: 100,000 dollars for the fire at the oil depot and 499,390 dollars for the floods.”

    Prof. Sarr said, “In 2023 for floods and nutrition, out of a total of 8.5 million people affected, ECOWAS provided support to half of the victims, or 4 million people for an amount of $12.6 million.

    “In 2024, ECOWAS has released 9 million dollars for internally displaced people, refugees, asylum seekers, as well as for the communities that welcome them (i.e. all 15 countries).

    “ECOWAS has allocated $1 million for stabilisation in Nigeria (victims of terrorism, displaced people, injured people, rehabilitation and strengthening community resilience).”

    She also revealed that “Out of a fund of 25 million dollars intended for the fight against terrorism (Nigeria, Burkina, Mali and Niger), ECOWAS has reserved 4 million dollars for humanitarian actions.”

    She explained that ECOWAS places more emphases on prevention, adding, “We have a disaster reduction strategy and tools such as the observation, monitoring and alert centre, which allows ECOWAS to monitor displaced populations and floods, to anticipate problems and better manage crisis situations.”

  • Senegal, ECOWAS and democracy

    Senegal, ECOWAS and democracy

    • By Paul Ejime

    When former President Macky Sall shook hands and handed the mantle of leadership to his successor President Bassirou Diomaye Faye, Senegal’s 5th  and youngest, on the 2nd of April 2024, he might have wondered what could have been the “what ifs” and “if onlys.”

    After serving as Prime Minister and Speaker/President of the National Assembly under former President Abdoulaye Wade, and then president of the Republic for 12 years, Sall had the golden opportunity to exit power with dignity. But like most politicians, he became blinded by greed and the trappings of office such that he could not resist the bait of tenure elongation or “third-term syndrome,” which has destabilized some African countries and put ECOWAS, the regional economic bloc, in a reputational quagmire.

    Before 2021, Senegal held the hope as an anchor of stability in politically restive West Africa, which has acquired the dubious reputation as a “military coup zone.”

    With an estimated 18 million predominantly Muslim population (more than 95% of Senegalese are Muslims), the country enjoys exemplary religious tolerance. It remains one of the two countries in West Africa yet to experience a military coup since its independence from France in 1960. The other exception is Cabo Verde.

    To its credit, Senegal has also enjoyed relatively long periods of peaceful transfer of power from one government to another, with Faye as its fifth and youngest president at age 44. Independent President Sedar Senghor and his successor, Abdou Diouf, both served 20 years each, while the third and fourth presidents Wade and Sall were in power for 12 years each and both attempted but failed to prolong their mandate.

    Sall, who was at the forefront of the opposition against Wade’s third-term botched plan, must have been encouraged by ECOWAS’ weakness to rein in leaders who got away with impunity, changing national constitutions, vote rigging, or other forms of manipulations considered as “political or constitutional coups,” which are as deadly as military putsches now on the increase in the region.

    The change of Cote d’Ivoire’s constitution in 2016 by President Alassane Ouattara followed by the referendum and the 2020 national election which President Alpha Conde rushed through during the Covid-19 pandemic period in Guinea readily come to mind.

    These undemocratic practices were usually followed by deadly violent street protests; devastating political divisions and served as triggers or drivers of political conflicts and instability in the countries involved and by extension, the region.

    Senegal was not spared by Sall’s political misadventures. After three years of a political rollercoaster, he reluctantly announced that he would not be on the ballot for the 2024 presidential election originally fixed for 25 February. Meanwhile, the nation for the first time in its history, recorded more than 1,500 political detainees, including political opponents.

    Faye himself was in jail awaiting trial on charges including contempt of court and defamation. The Sall government also proscribed the main opposition Coalition PASTEF led by popular opposition leader Ousmane Sonko, who was also tried and convicted for radicalising the youth, in what many observers considered as political persecution and a ploy to stop him from running for the presidency.

    Sall’s authoritarianism and intolerance of opposition grew by the day. Contrary to the provisions of regional protocols, he sacked members of the electoral commission of Senegal a few months before the national election, and at least 20 Senegalese were killed in clashes with security forces during street protests against the government.

    Read Also: How ECOWAS countries can achieve economic growth, by Bassey

    A day before the commencement of campaigns for the presidential election, Sall unleashed a presidential decree on his country, postponed the vote indefinitely and instead, called for a so-called national dialogue.

    Acting at the behest of the government, the National Assembly wadded into the political fray, and in a move similar to the invasion of the American Congress on 6 January 2021, paramilitary gendarmes stormed Senegal’s National Assembly to evict opposition MPs to pave the way for the passage of a controversial law postponing the presidential election from February to December 2024.

    The Constitutional Council, which has the final say on elections stepped in to nullify Sall’s decree and the controversial law passed by the parliament. The council also insisted that the election must be held before the 2nd of April, the end of Sall’s second term mandate.

    This forced the Sall government to move the presidential vote from 25th February to 24th March, 2024. Thanks to the resilience, commitment and determination of the Senegalese population, especially the vibrant civil society groups, the Sonko-Faye opposition alliance prevailed with Faye beating Sall’s ruling APR party candidate, former Prime Minister Amadou Ba, by 54 percent to 35 percent vote at the poll.

    Balloting was generally peaceful on polling day, with local and international observers describing the electoral process as transparent and all of Faye’s rivals conceding defeat before the announcement of poll results.

    A humiliated Sall also congratulated Faye and wasted no time in flying out of the country as the new president and his political mentor Sonko, who has been appointed prime minister, settled down to the task of governance.

    Some of the immediate challenges facing the new administration include healing a politically divided nation, empowering and gainfully engaging Senegal’s largely unemployed youthful population, fighting corruption, and growing the national economy by optimizing the benefits from new sources of revenue – oil and gas.

    It remains to be seen what the Faye-Sonko pair will make of political power, but the positive end to the political crisis in Senegal should be a turning point for the country to rediscover its democratic ethos. Also, coming after another successful and transparent election in Liberia last June, ECOWAS should capitalize on this opportunity to convince four of its member-states under military dictatorships that democracy and constitutional order are the way to go.

    The retreat of democracy and growing instability in West Africa and the wider African continent today is within the context of the global landscape characterized by the decline of multilateralism, and the convergence of multiple threats and opportunistic vectors such as terrorism and insecurity, geopolitical shifts, economic downturns, climate and environmental ecosystem changes, sociocultural dynamics, and digital advancements, especially the “invasion” of social media.

    Even so, the erosion of freedom, deterioration of the state of the rule of law and threats to democracy, after the euphoria that greeted the wave of multiparty democracy of the late 1990s and early 2000s in the ECOWAS region, had been encouraged largely by ineptitude, insincerity, sit-tight disposition of the political leaders and their refusal or inability to check political excesses among themselves.

    As a trailblazer among the eight African Regional Economic Communities (RECs), ECOWAS’ achievements in conflict prevention, management and resolution in member-states such as Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Cote d’Ivoire, Niger and The Gambia, are well-documented.

    The relevant, tested and tried instruments and protocols are there, but political will and resolve to act are lacking. To whip military-ruled Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso, and Niger back on the democratic line, ECOWAS leaders, the Commission and other institutions must demonstrate renewed commitment to upholding the regional integration principles.

    For instance, provisions of the 2001 regional Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance which emphasizes “zero tolerance” for unconstitutional change of government should apply to all “coups” – whether political, constitutional, or ballot box coups.

    Beyond the successes in Liberia and Senegal, warning signs are already ominously palpable in Togo, where the government is forcing through a dubious change from a presidential to a parliamentary system in a manner, that critics see as a ploy for tenure elongation, amid reported clamp down on the opposition and voices of dissent.

    ECOWAS should not stand by and watch until situations deteriorate before it intervenes. At a time when the region should be consolidating on democracy, four of the 15 ECOWAS member-states are ruled by soldiers, while three of the four have served notice of their intention to quit the regional organization.

    Two other member-states, The Gambia and Guinea Bissau, are hosting ECOWAS military stabilization missions due to instability, while regional leaders recently agreed that a similar mission be dispatched to a third country, Sierra Leone.

    Instead of propping up sitting governments with military missions, which some leaders are known to have misused against the opposition, ECOWAS should encourage member-states to eschew bad governance and violations of citizens’ rights, but respect national constitutions, the rule of law, and also stop rigging elections.

    Also, to avoid the growing criticism of foreign interference, ECOWAS should assert its independence with pro-West African critical thinking and strategic policy thrusts consistent with its vision of an ECOWAS of the People instead of an ECOWAS of State or Leaders.

    Nigeria, the regional powerhouse, should also lead by example to reposition the organization, which it hosts and remains the biggest financial contributor, toward fulfilling its mandate and the objectives of its founding fathers.

    • Ejime is a Global Affairs Analyst and Consultant on Peace & Security and Governance Communications
  • How ECOWAS countries can achieve economic growth, by Bassey

    How ECOWAS countries can achieve economic growth, by Bassey

    Concerted efforts at achieving regional peace and tackling insecurity can lead to food security and economic prosperity in the West African sub-region.

    This was the position of Senator Aniekan Bassey (Akwa Ibom North-East) who is also the Deputy Chairman Senate Committee on Agriculture Production Services and Rural Development.

    Bassey also maintained that peace and proper integration of member nations of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) was the panacea for regional growth.

    He made this known while interacting with journalists on the sidelines of the Sixth Legislature of the ECOWAS Parliament which held in Abuja.

    Read Also: How doctrine of necessity saved ECOWAS Parliament from leadership crisis-Barau

    “As a member of the ECOWAS Parliament, I have seen the challenges militating against the region. I believe that the most important thing is peace, sub-regional integration, and sub-regional unification. 

    “We will work towards achieving that as a parliament because our economic growth and stability are hinged on these,” he explained.

     “With a united front, the region can increase its trade volume and tackle the security challenges as well as count its gains in the agriculture and health sectors”, he said.