Tag: ECOWAS

  • Still on ECOWAS dilemma in Niger Republic

    Still on ECOWAS dilemma in Niger Republic

    • By Paul Ejime

    France and the United States were two countries that championed so-called international condemnation of and outrage against the July 26 military coup in Niger. But some two months on, both countries appear to be working at cross purposes in relation to efforts for the restoration of constitutional order in Niger or the reinstatement of deposed and detained President Mohamed Bazoum.

    This is hardly surprising, since international relations is about national interests. However, the implications of the unravelling dispositions of the two powerful nations as a metaphor and referendum on relations between developed countries and the developing nations require deeper reflections and interrogation.

    Paris and Washington have military bases and an estimated combined troops strength of 2,600 in Niger. Canada and other foreign nations also have soldiers, all purportedly training and assisting Niger armed forces in the global counter-terrorism fight.

    Also, foreign companies, particularly from France, the former colonial power, have been exploiting Niger’s natural resources, especially uranium and gold, repatriating the lion’s share of the proceeds for the development of their countries, leaving Niger and its estimated 26 million people in misery and abject poverty.

    In diplomatic parlance, Niger and its leaders “are strategic allies” to France, its Western allies and the United States.

    Given the growing anti-French sentiments in the former French colonies in Africa and with military coups in four of these countries in West Africa in the last three years – Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso, and Niger – France was naturally concerned that it was losing its stranglehold on these countries. There is also the fear that the West is losing the battle for influence on Africa to Russia and China.

    It was therefore, no wonder, that Washington and Paris were head over heels in mounting pressures on the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), to do everything to reverse the coup in Niger.

    Senior American officials worked their phones calling West African leaders, especially Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu, who is the current chairman of the Authority of ECOWAS Heads of State and Government.

    Even so, the external pressures on ECOWAS bore fruits. ECOWAS leaders in their first extraordinary summit on the Niger crisis on July 30 threatened the use of military force against the Brig.-Gen, Abdourahamane Tchiani-led junta if they failed to reinstate Bazoum and restored constitutional order in Niger within seven days.

    Unfortunately for ECOWAS, that ultimatum passed uneventfully. The same threat has been reiterated by different ECOWAS officials and at various fora of the regional bloc, including the leaders’ second extraordinary summit on August 10, and emergency meetings of regional military chiefs.

    “The D-Day has been decided and the Chiefs of defence staff are waiting for the go ahead for the deployment of the Standby force,” one ECOWAS official had enthused. But it has now emerged that ECOWAS is “on its own” as far as the military intervention in Niger is concerned.

    Apart from the complications and complexities of such a deployment in an environment of grave insecurity, coupled with the fact that the decision is unpopular because of the potential catastrophic consequences, the so-called military alliance for mutual support by Mali, Burkina Faso cannot be wished away.

    ECOWAS sanctions on Niger are biting hard, especially on the long-suffering population, but while the organisation is working through its designated envoy to Niger, former Nigerian Head of State Abdulsalami Abubakar coupled with back-channel initiatives by some Islamic clerics, the Ulamas, some ECOWAS leaders such as Togo’s President Faure Gnassingbé, are maintaining unilateral contacts with the junta.

    But more concerning is the fact that despite their public assurances, ECOWAS cannot count or rely on sincere and solid support of either the United States or France on its planned military operation.

    America for one, has been pursuing its national agenda which is at variance with what Washington had been pressurising ECOWAS to do.

    The new management of the ECOWAS Commission has made clear its determination to put an end to the resurgence of military coups in the region, which is a symptom of the governance malaise and leadership failures over the decade.

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    Some of the regional leaders now baying for blood in Niger, are partly responsible for military takeovers, including by blatantly altering their countries’ constitutions for tenure elongation, rigging of elections, clamping down on opposition and narrowing of the democratic space by not respecting the rule of law or citizens’ human rights.

    Many of them are not only corrupt but have failed woefully in delivering on their promises such as ending insecurity, providing jobs for the army of unemployed youths and failure to inspire economic development and prosperity.

    Meanwhile, Paris’ blunt refusal to withdraw its troops and ambassador from Niger as demanded by the junta, as if the West African country is still a colony, speaks to the arrogance of imperialism and mater-servant relationship between the North and South.

    But if France’s opaque position poses a problem for ECOWAS on how to proceed in Niger, the American agenda is also unhelpful if not undermining the regional approach.

    As ECOWAS continues to mull its options, America’s new Ambassador to Niger, Kathleen A. FitzGibbon arrived Niamey, the nation’s capital on August 19 to assume duty.

    As if that was not enough, American media on September 14 confirmed that “the U.S. military has resumed flying drones and manned aircraft out of air bases iin Niger after a coup temporarily halted all those activities there.”

    The 1,100 U.S. forces deployed in Niger had been confined inside their military bases. But the Pentagon was quoted as saying that “some military personnel and assets had been moved from the air base near Niamey to another in Agadez”.

    Gen. James Hecker, a top Air Force Commander for Europe and Africa, was quoted as saying that “in recent weeks some of those intelligence and surveillance missions have been able to resume due to U.S. negotiations with the junta.”

    What can ECOWAS glean from these seemingly underhand developments and their implications on its credibility and reputation as a regional bloc being dragged into a proxy war? Can the junta which, has cut a deal with America take the threat of military force by ECOWAS seriously?

    ECOWAS has to re-evaluate its partnerships, review its strategy, and prioritize the use of diplomacy, especially on the Niger crisis.

    Part of the Western hypocrisy and double standards is also the fact that Washington has still to determine whether the military takeover in Niger is “a successful coup” or “a coup attempt,” this is because the American Constitution forbids any dealings with a government that came to power though military coup. But the jury is still out on the sincerity or sustainability of such a policy where America’s national interests are involved just as in Niger.

    Furthermore, a group of five American Congressmen led by Sara Jacobs, Ranking member of the Subcommittee on Africa has in a letter dated September 18 and addressed to the Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. envoy to the United States Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield expressed “concern regarding the impact of ECOWAS sanctions on (Niger) civilian populations, particularly regarding the delivery of humanitarian and development services.”

    “While maintaining the pressure for a return to civilian rule is important, we need to mitigate spillover effects to the population as much as possible. Therefore, we urge the Biden administration to advocate for exemptions for humanitarian assistance and critical commodities such as food and medicine to be integrated into current ECOWAS sanctions,” said the Congress members.

    They also recalled a August 17 letter by the U.N. Under-Secretary General of Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator to the ECOWAS leadership, “expressing concern with the adverse impact of ECOWAS sanctions on the Nigerien civilian population and calling for amendments to current sanctions regimes to ensure timely delivery of aid and authorization of transactions essential for humanitarian operations,” noting: “this request was echoed in an August 28 advocacy note signed by more than 40 international humanitarian and development non-profit organizations.”

    As ECOWAS and other partners continue to grapple with the Niger political crisis, they cannot ignore these statements by external interests pushing for a tough stance against military coups and at the same time urging mitigation measures in Niger.

    With the involvement of Russia and China, it is clear that a UN Security Council approval for the use of military intervention in Niger threatened by ECOWAS is dead on arrival.

    ECOWAS is therefore left with the proverbial saying of “counting its teeth with its tongue,” in order words, Africans must find solutions to African problems!

    •Ejime is a global affairs analyst and consultant on peace & security and governance communications.

  • Bazoum asks ECOWAS Court to free him

    Bazoum asks ECOWAS Court to free him

    The coup-toppled president of Niger has appealed to the West African bloc’s court to free him, his lawyer said on Wednesday.

    Mohamed Bazoum was overthrown by the military on July 26 and has been detained at home with his wife and child since.

    He filed a lawsuit with a court of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on September 18, said his Senegalese lawyer Seydou Diagne.

    The lawsuit invokes his “arbitrary arrest” and “violation of freedom of movement”, Diagne said.

    “We request… in view of the violation of political rights, that the State of Niger be ordered to immediately restore constitutional order by handing over power to President Bazoum, who must continue to exercise it until the end of his mandate.”

    As well as slapping hefty sanctions against Niger, ECOWAS has warned that it could intervene militarily in Niger if diplomatic efforts to return Bazoum to power fail.

    Niger’s coup took place in a region wracked by a jihadist insurgency, following overthrows in neighbouring Mali and Burkina Faso.

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    If the court rules in favour of Bazoum, “Niger has the legal obligation to execute the decision”, Diagne said.

    Niger’s coup leaders have declared their intention to “prosecute” the democratically elected Bazoum for “high treason and undermining internal and external security”.

    On Wednesday the European Union (EU) reiterated its support for ECOWAS’s position and made a fresh call “for the immediate and unconditional release” of Bazoum and his family.

    “The EU position is clear and unchanged: the EU does not recognise authorities emanating from the putsch. President Bazoum remains the sole legitimate president of Niger,” EU foreign affairs spokeswoman Nabila Massrali said.

    The remarks came a day after the EU ambassador to Niamey, Salvador Pinto da Franca, was summoned by Niger’s military-appointed Prime Minister Ali Mahaman Lamine Zeine.

  • Shippers bemoan 400 trade barriers on ECOWAS corridor

    Shippers bemoan 400 trade barriers on ECOWAS corridor

    The Nigerian Shippers’ Council (NSC) has listed over 400 trade obstacles along the trade corridor of West African nations and called for a concerted efforts to address the problem

    The obstacles, the council said, were reported through the Trade Obstacles Alert Mechanism (TOAM).

    The Executive Secretary of the council, Mr Emmanuel Jime, made this known at the weekend, at the workshop held in collaboration with ECOWAS Commission on the awareness of creation for professional organisations and stakeholders in trade in Lagos.

    Jime said the trade barriers include lengthy clearance, transit checkpoints with attendant delays, harassments, exorbitant illegal fees and demands for bribes.

    The Shippers Council chief added that studies had highlighted the impediments faced by traders, particularly in border crossings and Customs clearance.

    The barriers, the NSC scribe noted, would not only disrupt the flow of goods but also threaten regional integration endeavours.

    Jime, however, explained that more than 49 per cent of them had been addressed by national focal points’ representatives, supported by advisory services from the International Trade Centre (ITC).

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    His words: “In addition, the NSC’s Complaints Unit (CU) stands as a testament to our tireless efforts in resolving shipping-related issues. We understand that disputes and challenges can occur during trade transactions. Hence, we have dedicated resources and expertise to swiftly address these issues, ensuring that businesses can continue operations with minimal disruptions.”

    Jime, however, assured that “our commitment to fostering collaboration and harmonisation among various stakeholders in the trade ecosystem is unwavering. We actively engage with other agencies, both within Nigeria and across West Africa, to align our efforts in promoting trade facilitation.

    “NSC has been at the forefront of advocating the digitisation of port processes. We recognise that the digital transformation of port operations is instrumental in streamlining trade, reducing bureaucracy, and enhancing transparency. Through advocacy, we embarked on initiatives aimed at enhancing trade efficiency and reducing barriers to participation in the modernisation of port systems. We aim to usher in an era of more efficient and responsive trade infrastructure.”

    “Our collective focus revolves around a topic that is not only crucial but timely, given our region’s aspirations for economic growth and regional integration,” he said.

    Jime said the full operational status of TOAM in 15 ECOWAS member-states underscores its potential to drive transformation and enhance regional trade to boost the economy of the region.

  • George Odiana bags Mandela Leadership Award, ECOWAS Ambassadorial appointment

    George Odiana bags Mandela Leadership Award, ECOWAS Ambassadorial appointment

    In a momentous celebration of outstanding dedication and unwavering commitment to Africa’s technological growth and human capital development, George Odiana has been honoured with the esteemed Nelson Mandela Leadership Award of Excellence and Integrity and appointed as an ECOWAS Youth Ambassador by the West African Youth Council (WAYC).

    The award recognises his substantial impact on the continent through technology-driven initiatives and his relentless pursuit of nurturing talent and innovation across Africa.

    George Odiana is a global product leader who works and consults with several companies across the world and has been a leading force in the transformation of African entrepreneurship.

    His work has significantly contributed to helping African entrepreneurs attain product-market fit, empowering them to create lasting value in their respective industries.

    As the Convener of the Career Advancement Programme (CAP) from 2016 to 2020 and mentor at Upthrust, FEES, and BrainStation amongst others, he initiated and participated in several programs that helped shape the future of young Africans by providing them with vital skills and mentorship opportunities. This has directly resulted in the transformation of over 10,000 young minds across the continent, paving the way for their growth and success in the tech industry.

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    Moreover, Odiana’s influence extends beyond Africa’s borders, with his technology contributions reaching 150 million users across 500 cities globally. His global impact is a testament to his dedication to innovation and his commitment to advancing technology for the betterment of society.

    Reflecting on his remarkable journey, Odiana stated: “I am deeply honoured to receive the Nelson Mandela Leadership Award of Excellence and Integrity and proud to be an Ecowas Ambassador. This award is a testament to the power of technology and human capital development in Africa. It underscores the incredible potential of our continent and the importance of nurturing talent and fostering innovation. I am committed to continuing my work to drive positive change and empower the next generation of African leaders.”

    The Nelson Mandela Leadership Award of Excellence and Integrity is a prestigious accolade that recognizes individuals who have exhibited remarkable leadership, integrity, and dedication to the betterment of African society. George Odiana’s contributions exemplify the spirit of Nelson Mandela, and he stands as an inspiring figure for future generations of African leaders.

  • Cleric cautions ECOWAS against military intervention in Niger

    Cleric cautions ECOWAS against military intervention in Niger

    The  Planter of the Christ Apostolic Church (CAC), Adamimogo Grace of Mercy Prayer Mountain Worldwide, Prophet Sam Olu Alo, has advised the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to avoid military intervention in Niger Republic.

    He urged the regional body to continue to explore negotiations and dialogue in resolving the impasse.

    Olu-Alo, who decried the situation in Ukraine, said the war with Russia and the devastation shows that men, women, including pregnant women, nursing mothers, children, and defenseless youths are always at the receiving end.

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    “No matter the time it takes to reach a compromise between the military who took over power in Niger and the ECOWAS, dialogue remains the solution because of the bitter experience of war, whereby the innocent citizens are always vulnerable”.

    “The calmness in Niger with no riot by the citizens in reaction to the military intervention should serve as a warning to all other African leaders and should caution every arbiter to be cautious with the type of intervention they are proffering to the debacle.

    “We plead with President Tinubu to use his position as the Head of ECOWAS to ensure that war is not the conclusion of their intervention and prevent shedding of innocent blood in Niger,” he said.

  • ECOWAS denies approving transition proposal for Niger

    ECOWAS denies approving transition proposal for Niger

    The Economic Community of West African States(ECOWAS) has denied reports of approving the transitional proposal for Republic of Niger.

    The regional body said in a statement on Thursday night that it remained resolute on its stand for an immediate return of power to the ousted President.

    It therefore said the report should be treated as fake.

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    ECOWAS statement reads: “The ECOWAS Commission’s attention has been drawn to a report of a so-called ECOWAS proposed transition time frame for Niger.

    “The report, which is in French and supposedly carried by AFP, is false, and should
    be treated as fake news.

    “The demand ofthe Authority of ECOWAS Heads of State and Governmentis are clear:
    the military authorities in Niger mustrestore constitutional order immediately by
    liberating and reinstatingH.E. Excellency President Mohamed Bazoum.”

  • Niger coup: Military option will be the last choice for ECOWAS – Tinubu

    Niger coup: Military option will be the last choice for ECOWAS – Tinubu

    President Bola Tinubu on Thursday, August 31, assured those intervening in the political crisis in Niger Republic that the military option would come last for the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) after all diplomatic options must have been exhausted.

    Receiving the Nigeria Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs led by the Sultan of Sokoto, His Eminence, Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III, at the State House, President Tinubu noted that the alternative of kinetic intervention in the Niger Republic had not been jettisoned.

    According to a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale, President Tinubu, however, insisted that any forceful removal of a democratic government remains “wholly unacceptable.”

    He said: “I must thank you for your several visits to Niger Republic, Your Eminence, but you will still have to go back. My fear has been confirmed in Gabon that copycats will start doing the same thing until it is stopped. We are neighbours with Niger Republic, and what has joined Nigerians together with their great people cannot be broken.

    “Nobody is interested in a war. We have seen the devastation in Ukraine and Sudan. But, if we don’t wield the big stick, we will all suffer the consequences together,” the President warned.

    President Tinubu noted that Nigeria, under General Abdulsalami Abubakar, instituted a nine-month transition programme in 1998, and it proved very successful, leading the country into a new era of democratic governance.

    The President said he sees no reason why such cannot be replicated in Niger if Niger’s military authorities are sincere.

    “Your Eminence, please don’t get tired, you will still go back there. The soldiers’ action is unacceptable. The earlier they make positive adjustments, the quicker we will dial back the sanctions to alleviate the sufferings we are seeing in Niger,” the President affirmed.

    On the hardship faced by many Nigerians post-fuel subsidy removal, the President assured that all ongoing reforms will liberate and reposition the economy, which will benefit the majority of the population in terms of opportunities, infrastructure, healthcare and education.

    “Nigeria is headed for a promise. Our diversity will turn into prosperity, not adversity. We will build a country that our children will be proud of.”

    The President told the delegation that the Federal Government had opened talks with State Governments to provide land for the proper sustenance of animals with a view to developing pan-national animal husbandry and agro-allied production and processing facilities for mass export, job creation and revenue generation.

    He added: “If Nigeria is still looking for vaccines for basic health issues; if infant and maternal mortality is rampant, then we should examine ourselves. I will commit to consulting with other leaders, like the NSCIA, and we will meet the needs of our people.”

    In his contribution at the meeting, Vice President Kashim Shettima said the President had budgeted N50 billion to support the ongoing rebuilding of lives and property in the North West and North East, with a new focus on dialogue to address security challenges. 

    The Sultan of Sokoto pledged “one hundred per cent loyalty” to the President, affirming that a leader can only reach a position by the will of God, and not man.

    He assured the President that the NSCIA would be available to advise and support President Tinubu to realize his dream for the country, adding that “God will hold all leaders to account, in justice and fairness.”

    He suggested that the distribution of palliatives across the country should be monitored and augmented, where it fails to reach some of the people who remain in dire need.

    “I honestly believe we will come out of the challenges stronger,” the Sultan of Sokoto concluded.

    Meanwhile, speaking to journalists at the Presidential Villa, after the meeting, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Muhammed Idris, said the President had been insistent on seeing to a speedy resolution of the crisis in Niger, so as to prevent the sort of situation in Gabon.

    He noted: “The President always says that there should be engagement and it is precisely for the reason of Gabon that he has asked that the issue of Niger be resolved. If we don’t nip it in the bud, as they say, Gabon and things like that could continue to happen.

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    “He’s a democrat, he believes that changes can only come through constitutional means. Therefore, he has asked the Ulamas to continue to engage and to tell everybody in the world to respect constitutional order.”

    Also speaking to journalists, Secretary-General of the NSCIA, Professor Is-haq Oloyede, said the body lent its own idea to the President on how it thinks the various challenges being experienced across the country could be managed.

    Oloyede noted: “The Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, under the leadership of His Eminence, the Sultan of Sokoto and the President-General, is here to pay a courtesy call on Mr. President, to appreciate him for the nation and to also advise him as to what the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs feels should be done to make sure that he continues to rule with transparency, honesty, equity, to the benefit of all members of this great country of ours.”

  • Tinubu rallies world leaders, ECOWAS against Gabon coup

    Tinubu rallies world leaders, ECOWAS against Gabon coup

    President Bola Tinubu is rallying other heads of state in the African Union (AU) and world leaders against the takeover of power announced in Libreville, the Gabonese capital, yesterday by some military leaders.

    The Presidency said Tinubu, who is the Chairman of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) is at the forefront of talks on steps to take on the political crisis in Gabon.

    Presidential spokesman, Ajuri Ngelale, told reporters at the at the State House in, Abuja, that his boss had expressed deep concerns over recurring political crisis in different parts of Africa, describing the situation as a contagious.

    The President, Ngelale said, also emphasized the importance of upholding the rule of law and utilising constitutional mechanisms to resolve electoral disputes.

    Early yesterday, a group of soldiers appeared on Gabonese state television to announce the nullification of the election results and the dissolution of all republic institutions.

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    The announcement followed the declaration of President Ali Bongo as winner of the elections, which were conducted over the weekend.

    It was Bongo’s third time to win in the Central African state.

    Relaying the President’s reaction to reporters,

    Ngelale said: “President Bola Tinubu is watching developments in Gabon very closely with deep concern for the country’s social political stability and at the seeming autocratic contagion apparently spreading across different regions of our beloved continent.

     ”The President, as a man who has made significant personal sacrifices in his own life in the course of advancing and defending democracy, is of the unwavering belief that power belongs in the hands of Africa’s great people and not in the barrel of a loaded gun.

    “The President affirms that the rule of law and a faithful recourse to the constitutional resolutions and instruments of electoral dispute resolution must not at any time be allowed to perish from our great continent.

    “To this end, the President is working very closely and continuing to communicate with other Heads of State in the African Union and beyond towards a comprehensive consensus on the next steps forward with respect to how the crisis in Gabon will play out and how the continent will respond to the contagion of autocracy we are seeing spread across our continent.”

    In search of solution to military incursions into politics, the President and the Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, discussed extensively on the developments emerging from Niger Republic and Gabon.

     Disclosing tips from the conversation, Ngelale said both leaders agreed on the need to preserve the democratic culture in African, calling on Africans in the Diaspora to exact their influence to preserve democracy on the continent.

    He said: “President Bola Tinubu has held a substantive and extensive discussion with Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, where issues related to the crisis in Niger Republic and the unfolding situation in Gabon were discussed.

    “The two heads of state mutually agreed that the promotion and protection of constitutional democratic governance on the continent remains a paramount priority and that the people of Africa living in the Diaspora around the world, making a huge impact to the sociopolitical landscapes of countries around the world and the economies of countries around the world, continue to urge on the global community to advance the cause of democracy on the continent for the sake of the economic prosperity of all Africans.”

    “So, it is of frontline importance to understand that His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, will continue to engage with heads of state, not just within the African Union, but also around the world and those engagements are ongoing.”

  • Falana to ECOWAS: take advantage of crisis to launch ECO currency

    Falana to ECOWAS: take advantage of crisis to launch ECO currency

    Human rights activist Femi Falana (SAN) has urged the leadership of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to take advantage of the political crisis in the region  to  launch the “ECO” currency.

    The human rights lawyer stated that  the 30 years struggle by ECOWAS to establish a regional currency  to promote trade and development in the region has been hijacked with the collaboration of some leaders, particularly President Emmanuel Macron of  France, who has taken over the responsibility of establishing and even printing the new currency. This,he said,  still showed  colonial influence. 

    Falana was the keynote speaker at the opening of the maiden West Africa Civil Society Week (WACSW23) in Lagos.

    The three-day conference, which ends August 31, was organised by the West Africa Civil Society Institute (WACSI) in collaboration with the West Africa Democracy Solidarity Network (WADEMOS), aims to delve into the pivotal role of civil society in safeguarding democratic values, consolidating regional development and navigating the complex contemporary landscape.

    He said:”The 30 years struggle by ECOWAS,  to establish a regional currency,  ECO to promote trade and development in the region have been hijacked with the collaboration of some leaders, particularly President Emmanuel Macron of  France  who has taken over the responsibility of establishing and even printing the new currency. This  still shows colonial influence. 

    We must take advantage of the political crisis in West Africa to launch the ECO as the currency for the region.”

    Falana urged  ECOWAS leaders approve a tenure of two terms for presidents without further delay, adding that in this era of military coup d’etat across West Africa it was imperative.

    “A tenure of two terms should be approved by ECOWAS for presidents in the region. In 2015, it was opposed by  Togo and the Gambia;  while in 2022 Senegal, and Cote D’Ivoire did the same.

    “We don’t want  military rule, our development will be constrained. There is urgent need to address tenure elongation in West Africa.What we call rule of law has become rule of the rich; rule of the few,” he added.

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    The human rights lawyer urged the regional body to end the reckless exploitation of  the natural resources of the member states of the ECOWAS by former colonial regimes and their allies. 

    Executive Director of  WACSI, Nana Afadzinu, said civil societies want democracy and good governance. She said they  oppose coup d’états and prefer constitutional rule and good electoral governance for peace, security, prosperity and collective well-being. 

    She urged the leadership of ECOWAS to reposition the regional body.”E

    COWAS, once our beacon of hope among regional economic bodies on the continent– a pace-setter and norm setter – seems to have lost the trust of its citizens and waned considerably in moral authority. We want our ECOWAS back- back to what it promised to be- that ECOWAS that wanted to be one of peoples and not states,” she said.

  • Cleric cautions ECOWAS against military intervention in Niger

    Cleric cautions ECOWAS against military intervention in Niger

    The Planter of the Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) Adamimogo Grace of Mercy Prayer Mountain Worldwide, Prophet Sam Olu Alo has advised the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)  to avoid military intervention in Niger Republic.

    He urged the regional body to continue to explore negotiations and dialogue in resolving the impasse.

    Olu-Alo, who decried the situation in Ukraine, said the war with Russia and the devastation shows that men, women including pregnant women, nursing mothers, children, and defenseless youths are always at the receiving end.

    “No matter the time it takes to reach a compromise between the military who took over power in Niger and the ECOWAS, dialogue remains the solution because of the bitter experience of war whereby the innocent citizens are always vulnerable”.

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    “The calmness in Niger with no riot by the citizens in reaction to the military intervention should serve as a warning to all other African leaders and should caution every arbiter to be cautious with the type of intervention they are proffering to the debacle.

    “We plead with President Tinubu to use his position as the Head of ECOWAS to ensure that war is not the conclusion of their intervention and prevent shedding of innocent blood in Niger,” he said.

    Olu-Alo lauded the choice of Ministers by President Tinubu with the inclusion of women and youths, adding that those who are privileged to be Ministers should do their work conscientiously while those who fail to live up to standard should not be spared.

    He also gave kudos to Tinubu for coming up with the Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy, adding that there are lots of resources in the water to explore, stating with this development, very soon, the economy of the country will bounce back.