Tag: ECOWAS

  • International Crisis Group urges ECOWAS, Nigeria to review Niger sanctions, reopen borders

    International Crisis Group urges ECOWAS, Nigeria to review Niger sanctions, reopen borders

    The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) should review the sanctions it imposed on Niger following the coup last July to mitigate the adverse impacts on citizens, the International Crisis Group (ICG) has urged.

    In a report titled “ECOWAS, Nigeria and the Niger Coup Sanctions: Time to Recalibrate” published on its website on December 5, the group says the sanctions are hurting civilians in Niger and Nigeria, and should be reviewed to target the generals that disrupted democracy.

    Noting that ECOWAS’s initial reaction to the coup was “understandable”, as it was informed “by legitimate concerns about the risks of coup contagion in West Africa”, the ICG says it “sent a strong signal of disapproval concerning coups and have undoubtedly created external pressure on Niger’s generals”.

    Crisis Group, however, observes that ECOWAS and Nigeria – its most influential member and current chair – “appear to have overshot the mark” as the sanctions “have created severe hardship in Niger with adverse boomerang effects on Nigeria”.

    For Niger, ICG says the suspension of official trade with member states, particularly Nigeria and Benin Republic, has created scarcities, fuelled inflation and worsened chronic food insecurity, in a country that was already facing its second-highest level of food insecurity since 2014, even before the coup.

    The global conflict prevention and peacebuilding organization is equally worried that the cut of electricity supply from Nigeria – which was providing over two thirds of Niger’s need – is further damaging the landlocked country’s brittle economy.

    For Nigeria, Crisis Group notes that the border closure is “crippling a vibrant cross-border economy” along the over 1,600 km-long Nigeria–Niger border, officially estimated at over 238 million US dollars in 2021.

    “It is also disrupting livelihoods in border communities and exacerbating humanitarian challenges in the northernmost states, where many residents are still grappling with attacks by terrorist and bandit groups. Such disruptions could render unemployed youth more vulnerable to recruitment by diverse armed groups,” ICG warns.

    The report further observes that the border closure is also jeopardising two major infrastructure projects that were designed to boost the economies of Nigeria and Niger.

    These are the 284km Nigeria-Niger Railway line and the 4,100km Trans-Saharan Gas Pipeline, through which Nigeria plans to supply up to 30 billion cubic metres of natural gas to Europe yearly. Both projects are now “at risk of delay or worse”, the report warns.

    Read Also: ECOWAS Court orders Benin Republic to pay Igboho CFA 20m for unlawful detention

    ICG also observes that the sanctions, as presently being implemented, could undermine Nigeria-Niger security cooperation, particularly in fighting Boko Haram in Nigeria’s north east and banditry in the north west.

    To resolve the present impasse and develop arrangements for returning Niger to constitutional rule, Crisis Group urges all parties – ECOWAS, Nigerian government and the junta – to show flexibility, formally drop its threat of military intervention and “aim for a constitutional transition”.

    It argues that while ECOWAS must press on for restoration of democratic rule in Niger, the regional bloc should review its sanctions package, focus it on the interests of the junta leaders in Niamey, and sparing the wider populations of Niger and northern Nigeria further hardship. 

    For the junta, Crisis Group urges it to initiate comprehensive dialogue with all relevant stakeholders in Niger – including political parties, civil society groups and regional leaders – and agree on steps for quick return to constitutional rule.

  • Organisers solicits support  for ECOWAS Abuja Int’l Marathon

    Organisers solicits support  for ECOWAS Abuja Int’l Marathon

    All hands are on deck to ensure the success of the 2023 ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon, so said  the Race Director Gabriel Okon.

    As part of the measure to ensure that participants and residents of Abuja have a memorable experience, the Race Director and other functional managers including officers of the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and the Vehicle Inspection Officers (VIO) embarked on route tour to identify areas that will be closed permanently for the four hours that the race will last and areas that will be partially closed.

    Okon disclosed that the half marathon will start in front of the ECOWAS Commission at 7 am, while the 5-kilometre fun race will start at Banex. Plaza.

    He advised runners to get to start points before 6 am on race day December 16, 2023, because “once its 6 am, Thomas Sankara Street and the Yakubu Gowon Crescent will be totally blocked, there will be partial closure on Nnamdi Azikwe Expressway but the roads will be blocked from Banex Plaza to the Vehicle Park behind the Eagles Square and the Federal Secretariat.”

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    The Race Director urged residents of FCT especially those who live along the route to come out in their thousands and cheer the runners. He appealed for the cooperation of residents with the organisers, especially those who will give instructions to those who intend to go out on the race day,

    Said Okon: “the good news is that if we start the race by 7 am by 10 am we are done with both the half and marathon and the 5 km. so we are appealing to residents for their cooperation. We will begin our route education in all the media this week, especially for those who live around the route and those who may have important business to transact around the area on race day.

    “As for runners, our kits distribution starts on Monday, December 11 to Friday, December 15 at the vehicle park behind the Federal Secretariat, runners apart from getting the running vests and number bibs will also get a participant guide which contains all the information they need to know especially about road closure, alternative routes, how to get to the start point on race day and where they could park their vehicles,” he noted.

  • Coups: options before Tinubu, ECOWAS

    Coups: options before Tinubu, ECOWAS

    When he assumed leadership of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on July 9, 2023, Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu made it priority to denounce the regional bloc’s penchant for military overthrow of elected governments. But almost as if another set of coupists dared him, he soon found himself confronting the July 26 coup in Niger Republic. As the new chairman of the bloc, he had encouraged ECOWAS to “stand firm on democracy,” insisting that, “We will not accept coup after coup in West Africa again. Democracy is very difficult to manage, but it is the best form of government.” Late last week, however, President Tinubu, while attending this year’s COP28 climate change conference in Dubai, must have winced at the irony of the exchange of gunfire in Guinea-Bissau where he was installed as ECOWAS chairman. It was unlikely the armed clash was a coup attempt, but no one could rule out that possibility, given the fragile nature of many West African states.

    Shortly after President Tinubu assumed office as ECOWAS leader, and while he was still contemplating what to do with the military regimes in Guinea, Mali, and Burkina Faso, soldiers struck again in Niger Republic. He soon discovered that putting down coups or responding to them adequately in such a way as to discourage a repeat elsewhere was far more difficult than talking tough. Since then, there has been dreadful unease in Sierra-Leone, and last week, in Guinea-Bissau. The proclivity for coups goes beyond ECOWAS. Beyond the sub-region, the three Central African countries of Sudan, Chad, and Gabon have all experienced one coup or the other. All ECOWAS countermeasures to deter coups in the sub-region have failed spectacularly. But the recent shootings in Sierra-Leone, Guinea-Bissau and the coup in Gabon have presented a formidable challenge to President Tinubu and his fellow ECOWAS and African leaders to rein in the attacks on democracy. Indeed, shortly after the 2023 Nigerian elections, a section of the Nigerian elite openly and foolishly solicited for military intervention to assuage their electoral losses.

    ECOWAS may have failed to redress the coups in Mali, Niger, Guinea, and Burkina Faso, but if the cancer is to be prevented from spreading, the sub-region cannot afford to be paralysed in the face of the creeping danger. The threat to democracy in West Africa, and indeed Africa as a whole, is real. However, the reasons for the coups have been largely superficial and indefensible. Worse, the usurping military governments have been unable to significantly ameliorate the crises that predisposed their countries to military takeover. Mali and Burkin Faso have still been unable to defeat the Jihadist insurgencies the military complained about. The Niger Republic coup was largely carried out for self-preservation. Even though the coup leaders, particularly in Francophone West Africa, have argued that they intervened to erase the last parasitic vestiges of French colonial rule, their administrations have had little impact on the people. With some four ECOWAS countries now sitting pretty under military rule, it has become much harder to stanch the coup frenzy.

    Read Also: ECOWAS Parliament gets two new MPs

    Now that President Tinubu has found out how difficult it is to deal with the sub-region’s coup crisis, it should be an opportunity for him to go back to the drawing board to fashion a way out. Neither he nor the regional bloc can afford to stay aloof. While the challenge of reining in the coup monster is daunting, it is by no means insurmountable. If the problem is not tackled and resolved, no one can tell where next the cancer will recrudesce. The problem is therefore urgent, and the solution must be nearly perfect. For years, the region has been inundated with sweet talks about good governance as an antidote to coups. On the surface, this is exquisite talk. But it is not every country with incompetent leaders that succumbs to military takeover. There will always be excuses for coups; and for poor countries, those excuses will come in torrents. Had wiser counsel not prevailed, Nigeria would have suffered military convulsion when defeated candidates and their parties in the last polls foolishly advocated for coup.

    President Tinubu needs to revisit the coup problem, emplace a committee or two to study the issue possibly from country to country on the coup belt, and proffer solutions to be presented and discussed at the next ECOWAS summit. The issue must be kept on the front burner. Next, coup-ridden countries must be coaxed, and if need be cajoled, into delivering a short and concise transition programme to elect civilian leaderships. Sanctions have sometimes proved counterproductive, and shutting borders have been ineffective. Short of military intervention, those two measures are unlikely to work, especially in light of the doctrine of non-intervention in the domestic affairs of sovereign countries. Instead, like the European Union (EU) and other regional economic blocs, it is time to inspire a larger-than-life and irresistible economic programme that confers limitless and tantalising advantages on member countries. Unelected leaders and their countries will naturally be barred. Nigeria is obviously beset by enormous economic and social problems, but President Tinubu must be seen to transcend mundaneness to actively engage the sub-region in finding solutions to the coup crisis.

  • ECOWAS Parliament gets two new MPs

    ECOWAS Parliament gets two new MPs

    The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Parliament has admitted two new legislators into its fold.

    Armando Correia Dias and Manuel Nascinemto Lopes  from Guinea Bissau were sworn-in at the ongoing Parliament’s Second Ordinary Session in the 2023 Legislative Year,  holding in Abuja

    The duo took the oaths before Speaker Sidie Mohamed Tunis and members of the Parliament, who welcomed them to the Parliament.

    They replaced Caramo Camara, who was not reelected into Parliament in the last Legislative election in Guinea Bissau and Marciano Indi, who was appointed Secretary of State in the Guinea Bissau government.

    The ECOWAS Parliament has a total of 115 seats and 14 standing committees; each member state is guaranteed a minimum of five seats.

    Meanwhile, the Parliament has a new Acting Secretary-General,  Mr Bertin Somé.

    The appointment was made by the Speaker of the Parliament, Mr Sidie Tunis, in a statement by the parliament on Saturday.

    It stated that the former Director of Parliamentary Affairs and Research, Somé, got the nod of the parliamentarians. 

    Somé who assumed office on Nov. 1, replaced Mr John Azumah, who retired from active service of the community.

    Somé, a Burkinabe, joined the ECOWAS Parliament in September 2009 as a Committee Clerk and was appointed Director of Parliamentary Affairs and Research in February 2016.

    While serving in the two positions, he demonstrated his attention to detail, particularly in his relations with staff and members of the parliament.

    Read Also: ECOWAS countries post impressive economic growth in 2023 – Touray

    Somé, before joining the Community Parliament, had a successful long-standing career in the National Assembly of Burkina Faso, during which he held various positions.

    Also, he was Director General of Legislative Services, Reporting Director and Chief of Staff to the Speaker of the NASS.

  • ECOWAS countries post impressive economic growth in 2023 – Touray

    ECOWAS countries post impressive economic growth in 2023 – Touray

    The president of the ECOWAS Commission, Omar Touray has said that most of the ECOWAS member states posted impressive economic growth in 2023.

    He, however, stressed the impact of inflation and huge public debt.

    Touray said: “Despite a difficult international environment and the slowdown in the global economies, continued inflation, deteriorating fiscal balance and mounting public debt have eroded the welfare and standard of living of ECOWAS citizens.

    “The ECOWAS Institutions have performed creditably well during the 2023 fiscal year despite numerous challenges.

    “Notable achievements include the establishment of the ECOWAS National Biometric Identity Card (ENBIC), the introduction of ECOVISA, a single visa system, and the adoption of a set of 96 ECOWAS Standards (ECOSTANDS).”

    Touray identified geo-political conflicts, the persistence of inflationary pressures, high and rising public debt, and tightening of monetary policies as some of the challenges confronting the community.

    In the area of opportunities at the disposal of the sub-regional body, Touray listed implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA), increased investment in infrastructure, and development of the digital economy.”

    Read Also: ECOWAS condemns attempt to truncate democratic govt in Sierra Leone

    The report therefore recommended strengthening of regional cooperation and integration, promotion of private sector development, investment in human capital as well as enhancement of resilience to shocks as some of the measures to be considered

    Meanwhile, Nigeria presented its report at the ongoing second session of the ECOWAS Parliament in Abuja.

    Presenting Nigeria’s report, Hon Linda Ikpeazu, outlined the country’s progress in the areas of politics, security, economy, and human rights.

    Ikpeazu also stressed the country’s commitment to implementing ECOWAS texts, including the Protocol Relating to the Community Levy, the Protocol on Free Movement of Persons and Goods, and the Supplementary Act on Equality of Rights between Women and Men for Sustainable Development in the ECOWAS Region.

    The report also affirmed Nigeria’s commitment to advancing the growth of the ECOWAS region through various community development initiatives. The government is also committed to fulfilling its obligations under ECOWAS treaties and protocols.

  • High Altitude Athletics Club preps for ECOWAS Abuja Int’l Marathon

    High Altitude Athletics Club preps for ECOWAS Abuja Int’l Marathon

    The High Altitude Athletics Club of Jos, one of Nigeria’s premier athletic clubs, has announced its intention to send 25 elite athletes to the upcoming 2023 ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon.

    “The ECOWAS race is an excellent platform for our athletes to showcase their talent,” Steve Nuhu, the club’s coordinator and  mentor to numerous long-distance runners in Nigeria, said.

    He  expressed confidence in his team’s ability to sweep the podium, particularly in the women’s category.

    “Our athletes have been training diligently and are determined to achieve this goal,” he stated.

    The ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon, scheduled for December 16, 2023, features two categories: a half marathon and a 5km fun run.

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    The half-marathon winner will receive a cash prize of $10,000, while the second and third-place finishers will earn $5,000 and $4,000, respectively.

    The top ten finishers will receive generous prize money, with the fourth place receiving $3,500, fifth place $3,000, sixth place $2,500, seventh place $2,000, eighth place $1,500, ninth place $1,200, and tenth place $1,000.

    The winners of the 5km family and fun run will receive $750, the second-place finishers $500, the third-place finishers $400, and the fifth-place finishers $200.

    “We at the High Altitude Athletics Club are thrilled about the ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon,” Nuhu stated. “This provides another international stage for our athletes. We have already registered 25 elite athletes, and many fun runners are joining us from Jos.”

    While expressing gratitude to ECOWAS for providing opportunities for runners not only in Nigeria but across the sub-region, Nuhu made a particular appeal to Northern Governors to invest in marathon races.

    “We applaud ECOWAS’s efforts to promote marathon races in the sub-region. Our appeal goes out to governors, particularly in Northern Nigeria, to take up this responsibility and help our country realize its immense potential in long-distance running. With the right investment in our Northern talents, we can soon compete with Kenyans, Ethiopians, and others,” Nuhu concluded.

  • ECOWAS condemns security breaches in Sierra Leone

    ECOWAS condemns security breaches in Sierra Leone

    The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has condemned the security breaches in Sierra Leone.

    The condemnation is contained in a statement issued by ECOWAS on Sunday, November 26, in Abuja.

    The statement stated: “The bloc has learnt, with utter disgust, a plot by certain individuals to acquire arms and disturb the peace and constitutional order in Sierra Leone.

    “ECOWAS condemns this act and calls for the arrest and prosecution of everyone involved in the illegality. The bloc has always maintained its zero tolerance for unconstitutional change of government.

    “We want to reaffirm our commitment to supporting the government and the people of Sierra Leone’s quest to deepen democracy and good governance by consolidating peace and security so as to foster socio-economic development.”

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    A military armoury in Sierra Leone’s capital Freetown came under attack on Sunday, the government announced, as it imposed an immediate national curfew.

    The government said those attempting to break into the armoury had been repelled.

    The information ministry assured the public that “the government and our state security forces are in control.

    “To enable the security forces to continue the process of apprehending the suspects, a nationwide curfew is declared with immediate effect across the country.”

    No further details were given on the alleged perpetrators of the attack or their motives.

    Sierra Leone, an English-speaking country in West Africa, has been going through a political crisis following presidential and general elections in June this year.

    The statement added: “The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has learnt with utter disgust a plot by certain individuals to acquire arms and disturb the peace and constitutional order in Sierra Leone.

    “ECOWAS condemns this act and calls for the arrest and prosecution of all participants in this illegal act.”

    ECOWAS reiterated its zero-tolerance for unconstitutional change of government, underscoring its commitment to supporting the government and people of Sierra Leone to deepen democracy and good governance, consolidate peace and security as well and foster socio-economic development.

    Similarly, in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, the US embassy in Freetown “condemn in the strongest possible terms the attempted overnight forceful seizure of Wilberforce Barracks and armoury.

    “Such actions have no justification. We urge full cooperation with the government security forces’ ongoing operation to detain those responsible and strongly encourage all to adhere to government guidance regarding the ongoing curfew for their own safety.

    “The United States continues to stand with all those working for a peaceful, democratic, healthy, and prosperous Sierra Leone.”

  • Runners  begin registration for ECOWAS Abuja Marathon

    Runners  begin registration for ECOWAS Abuja Marathon

    Thousands of enthusiastic runners are registering for the ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon and they are attributing their interest in the race to the generous prize money winners will go home with.

    The ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon slated for December 16, is in two categories, the half marathon and the 5km road race.

    The winner of the half marathon will go home with $10,000; the second-placed runner will go home with $5,000 and the third-place runner $4,000.

    The first ten finishers will go home with generous prize money. The fourth placed $3,500, fifth $3,000, sixth $2, 500, seventh $2000, eighth $1,500, ninth $1,200 and the tenth placed runner $1,000.

    For the five-kilometre family and fun race the winner will go home with $750, second placed runner $500, third place runner $400 and fifth placed $200.

    Race Director Gabriel Okon of Nigeria’s Y & T Sports Management Limited told our correspondent that registration by Nigerians and other runners from ECOWAS countries has been very, very encouraging.

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     “In my over three decades of experiences in marathons and road races, the response of runners to the 2023 ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon has been fantastic,” he said. “Most of the runners that came to submit their forms at our secretariat are confident that they will win the race. They are enthusiastic about the race and the prize money.’’

    Okon, a veteran of many marathon and road races in Nigeria and America. assured intending runners that everything is being put in place to ensure their safety along the route on race day.

    “We are working with all relevant government agencies to ensure that the route is safe for runners and in the area of security, we are also working with security agencies to ensure the safety of runners”.

    Okon also revealed that plans are in place to ensure that runners and friends of ECOWAS who will be at the finish point enjoy first-class entertainment.

  • BREAKING: Coup: ECOWAS parliament seeks lifting of sanctions against Niger Republic

    BREAKING: Coup: ECOWAS parliament seeks lifting of sanctions against Niger Republic

    The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Parliament has appealed to the Heads of State and Government in the region to lift the sanctions imposed on the Niger Republic.

    The Head of State in ECOWAS had last July imposed sanctions on the Niger Republic to protest the ouster of President Mohamed Bazoum by certain military officers led by erstwhile Presidential Guard Commander, General Abdourahamane Tchiani.

    The Chief Whip of the Senate, Senator Ali Ndume, who addressed journalists after the opening session of the parliament, declared that states in Nigeria, about seven of them bordering Niger Republic are at the receiving end of the sanctions.

    Read Also: ECOWAS judges resolve to reposition court

    Ndume said: “Children and women have been exposed to untold hardship. No meaningful progress has been made in resolving this issue. We are appealing to ECOWAS states to lift the sanction and open the closed border between Niger and Nigeria because it is the poor that are suffering. Let me say this is a collective decision by concerned citizens.

    “This Press conference is simply an appeal to the ECOWAS Heads of State to consider the humanitarian situation and resolve the political impasse in Niger.”

    Details shortly…

  • 2023 ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon holds  Dec. 16

    2023 ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon holds  Dec. 16

    The 2023 edition of the ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon will be held on Saturday, December 16, the organisers have announced.

    Unlike past editions in which participants are restricted just to the half-marathon, this year’s race will feature the 5km fun run targeted at families and other fun runners.

    In a statement issued on Monday, interested participants were advised to pick up their free registration forms at the ECOWAS secretariat, the AFN Secretariat in Abuja, Sports offices across the Six Area Councils in the Federal Capital Territory as well as the Rugby Federation office in Abuja.

    Others can also register online at www. Ecowasabujamarathon.com to be part of the 2023 edition of the ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon

    For this year’s race, the start point for the Half Marathon is the ECOWAS Secretariat while the 5km race will be starting at the Nnamdi Azikwe Express Way.

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    Both races will climax at Eagles Square where there will be other fun activities with entertainment

    While expressing delight with planned innovations and expansion measures for the 2023 ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon, the Race Director, Gabriel Okon of Y & T Sports Management, urged Nigerians to use this platform to integrate with their brothers and sisters across the sub-region.

     “This year’s theme is promoting integration among ECOWAS citizens so we want our people both old and young in Abuja and across the country to come out en mass to be part of this year’s race,” said Okon , former Performance Director of Athletics Federation of Nigeria.

    Okon also revealed that several mouth-watering prizes would be up for grabs at this year’s race as the ECOWAS Abuja International Marathon is now a bigger race.

     “Of course, a lot of prizes will be given out to the participants; we are expecting runners from across the sub-region, from Ghana to Senegal, Liberia to Gambia, and many more.”