By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Citizenship DailyCitizenship Daily
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • News
    • Health
    News
    Show More
    Top News
    Incessant killings, kidnappings: Kaduna community appeals for military formation
    November 24, 2024
    Monarch calls for inter-ethnic peace building committee in Taraba 
    December 1, 2024
    Kaduna: Troops kill 8 bandits in Birnin Gwari LGA 
    August 29, 2024
    Latest News
    Tinubu sends N1.48trn Rivers 2025 budget to Senate, seeks speedy passage
    May 22, 2025
    Funtua Unity Foundation frowns at distorted account of Maska Dynasty
    May 22, 2025
    Senate expresses concern over Boko Haram resurgence, likelihood of spreading to other states 
    May 21, 2025
    APC affirms One-China principle, lauds Nigeria-China partnership
    May 21, 2025
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    Tinubu Presents N1.78 trillion FCT budget to NASS
    May 9, 2025
    NASCON hinges 100% growth in dividend payout, higher profitability to expansion drive
    May 9, 2025
    World Bank appoints Aliko Dangote to drive investments, create jobs in emerging economies
    April 24, 2025
    NNDC declares N3.24bn profit, attributes it to efficient, prudent management
    April 23, 2025
    IMF appoints Tony Elumelu to Advisory Council on Entrepreneurship and Growth
    March 27, 2025
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    2027: APC govs endorse Tinubu as sole presidential candidate
    May 22, 2025
    Shadow Govt: Senior lawyer commends DSS, says agency acted within its mandate
    May 19, 2025
    North-West APC governors, leaders endorse Tinubu for 2027
    May 17, 2025
    Ganduje, Kebbi Gov, others storm NASS as three Kebbi PDP senators join APC
    May 13, 2025
    Ex-Govs Ortom, Aliyu, Igbinedion, Ishaku, 35 others join PDP BoT as members
    May 12, 2025
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • BackPage
    EditorialShow More
    End this mindless fuel price war
    May 9, 2025
    End this mindless fuel price war
    November 24, 2024
    North’s power paralysis
    November 16, 2024
    End this mindless fuel price war
    September 28, 2024
    Why this gang up against Dangote!
    August 20, 2024
  • Special Reports
  • Sports
  • e-Paper
  • …more
    • Videos
    • Photo Speaks
    • e-Paper
    • My Bookmarks
    • Contact US
Reading: Jittery Junta Leaders and Compelling Needs for ECOWAS Unity
Share
Citizenship DailyCitizenship Daily
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Editorial
  • Special Reports
  • Opinion
  • Sports
Search
  • Home
  • News
    • Health
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • BackPage
  • Special Reports
  • Sports
  • e-Paper
  • …more
    • Videos
    • Photo Speaks
    • e-Paper
    • My Bookmarks
    • Contact US
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Citizenship Daily > Blog > Opinion > Jittery Junta Leaders and Compelling Needs for ECOWAS Unity
Opinion

Jittery Junta Leaders and Compelling Needs for ECOWAS Unity

Editor
Last updated: January 28, 2025 4:35 pm
Editor Published January 28, 2025
Share
SHARE

By Paul Ejime

Ahead of the 29 January 2025 deadline for their self-imposed exit from ECOWAS, the junta leaders of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, the Alliance of Sahel States, AES, have become jittery, deploying every trick, including disinformation, misinformation and blackmail to deflect blame for the inevitable consequences and uncertainty of their military adventure.

ECOWAS leaders at their last Abuja summit in December 2024 warned the three countries that having served notice of their withdrawal from the regional bloc in January 2024, the separation will become effective 12 months later, according to the regional bloc’s relevant protocol. This is despite the grace period of six months mentioned in the summit Communique. After receiving official correspondence from the ECOWAS Commission on the summit’s decision, the juntas have gone into propaganda overdrive.

For context, Niger is a country that has benefitted and continues to reap from Nigeria’s generosity including infrastructural development such as the rail system, electricity supply and new road networks. When ECOWAS leaders toyed with the idea of using military force to restore constitutional order in Niger following the August 2023 military coup led by Gen. Abdourahamane Tchiani, Nigerians were among the strongest opponents of the move arguing that seven Nigerian states shared borders and affinity with Niger.

It is therefore ludicrous for Tchiani to be accusing Nigeria of collaborating with France to destabilise Niger. In reality, the three AES countries are landlocked, and the Tchiani-led junta has fallen out with authorities in Benin Republic, a neighbouring country. In addition to their border dispute, Niger no longer has access to the Benin port for its imports and this has resulted in severe hardship in Niger, charactised by scarcity of essential goods, run-away inflation, high unemployment, a dysfunctional healthcare system and avoidable deaths in hospitals.

Instead of addressing their domestic existential threats, coupled with criticism of human rights violations and intolerance of dissent, Tchiani and his colleagues in Mali and Burkina Faso are blaming outsiders for the humanitarian crisis they brought on their people.

ECOWAS might have made a mistake by attempting to use military force on Niger without exhausting other available options. However, military rule is an aberration in today’s World and the organisation has since changed tact, using diplomacy instead, to engage its four member States under military rule, including Guinea.

Yet, the three junta leaders are unyielding. Meanwhile, the appalling security situation, one of the reasons the military rulers gave for toppling the civilian governments has not improved. Armed groups are still inflicting heavy casualties on civilians and soldiers in the three countries.

The AES juntas claim to detest France, but their countries are still members of the Francophone West African Economic and Monetary Union, UEMOA, supported by Paris. They are also still using the franc CFA currency, controlled by the French Treasury.

It is interesting that after agreeing on new national passports that will not bear the ECOWAS insignia, the junta leaders have announced that ECOWAS citizens can visit their three countries without a visa, which is consistent with the ECOWAS 1979 free movement protocol, a case of eating their cake and having it.

ECOWAS at 50 this year, cannot claim to be perfect. One of its major problems is leadership at the national and regional levels. But just as a chain is as strong as its weakest link, an organisation is only as good/effective as its weakest member.

ECOWAS evolved from the ashes of military dictatorships, however, in the last 12 years, the malaise of sit-tight syndrome, state capture, indiscriminate altering of national constitutions, election rigging, stifling of opposition and personalisation of democracy” crept in.

Critics now see the regional economic bloc once praised for its track record in conflict management and resolution as a club of self-serving leaders lacking the political will to end “political or constitutional coups,” which are as dangerous if not deadlier than military coups. But the solution is not in more coups, civilian or military. Urgent collective and deliberate measures are required to arrest the slide in the interest and benefit of community citizens in the “ECOWAS of People”.

The statement credited recently to the Togolese Foreign Minister Robert Dussey to the effect that Togo could join the AES countries, requires further interrogation since the Togolese President Faure Gnassingbe and his Senegalese counterpart Diomaye Faye are the ECOWAS envoys negotiating rapprochement with the AES group.

Is Faure running with the hare and hunting with the hound? Last year, his government carried out controversial changes to Togo’s constitution and conducted widely criticised legislative elections, believed to pave the way for his tenure elongation in violation of regional protocols. Togo has covertly offered the AES countries access to its Lome port and recently, all four countries had a joint military exercise. Could Togo’s reported plan to join the AES group, Faure’s ploy to pre-empt ECOWAS’ attempt to question his dodgy democratic credential Faure’s political ambition?

There is a strong anti-French sentiment in Francophone African countries linked to controversial colonial agreements including defence/military pacts, which the AES leaders are capitalising on for their populist dispositions. The agreements have nothing to do with ECOWAS, so it begs the question that the AES leaders are blaming the organisation for them.

To come clean of accusations of foreign influence/interference, ECOWAS must assert its independence and put its house in order but not succumb to blackmail. The organisation should innovate and reinvent itself to withstand emerging threats from the geopolitical and geostrategic shifts in international relations ecosystem.

ECOWAS leaders should be pulling together, including reaching an agreement on the term limit for the President/Prime Minister in Member States, to stop the tenure elongation syndrome haemorrhaging the organisation. They should deliver good governance and muster the political will to end political or constitutional coups and other causes/enablers of military coups.

Ghana’s new President John Mahama has named a Special Envoy to the AES countries. The Ghanaian leader should be encouraged to work within the ECOWAS system to prevent a further weakening of the organisation.

Also, Nigeria as the “big brother, regional power” and the current ECOWAS Chair, should step up to the plate and work with other leaders to champion the rescue and repositioning of ECOWAS.

Membership of a united ECOWAS provides unlimited opportunities for regional cooperation and development. ECOWAS/AES’ separation will unleash potential negative consequences on the population of the AES countries, including massive loss of jobs from the closure of Community institutions and humanitarian food reserve facilities. Also, there will be an end to the benefits of regional free trade scheme and the immediate recovery of more than US$273 million at the ECOWAS Bank for Investment and Development (EBID) loans and liabilities.

A sudden exit from the ECOWAS Inter-Governmental Action Group against Money Laundering (GIABA), will also make the AES countries vulnerable to the global Finance Action Task-force (FATF) sanctions, plus an end to regional security cooperation, shared intelligence and coordinated joint military operations, which will make the countries easy targets for more deadly attacks by terrorist and armed insurgency groups.

Addressing the media in Abuja on Monday 27 January, the Head of EU Delegation to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Ambassador Gautier Mignot urged ECOWAS to reconsider its decision on the AES group.

“It is a decision that we regret because we strongly support West African integration. Splitting does not seem to us a good idea,” said the envoy, who cited the EU’s experience with Brexit, based on negotiation and dialogue.

The junta leaders should also take a cue from the EU official’s counsel, bearing in mind that they will be held accountable for the consequences of dragging millions of their compatriots into socioeconomic catastrophe and political uncertainty.

ECOWAS is only demanding that they respect regional protocols and honour their countries’ obligations and commitment to democratic principles instead of sticking to endless opportunistic political transition programmes designed for their self-perpetuation in power.

It is within the rights of AES nations to associate or pursue common goals, but not necessarily by quitting ECOWAS. Organisations such as the Mano River Union; Lake Chad Basin Commission/Authority, the Zone of Prosperity and UEMOA, are all members of ECOWAS.

(L-R) President Tinubu, ECOWAS Chair, Junta Leaders Assimi Goita (Mali), Ibrahim Traore (Burkina Faso) & Abdourahamane Tchiani (Niger).

 

Ejime is a Global Affairs Analyst and Consultant on Peace & Security, and Governance Communications

You Might Also Like

Gombe 2027: Between political loyalty, zoning, and competence

Faure’s stealthy changes to Togo polity for self-perpetuation

Has President Volodymyr Zelensky’s action justified the pogroms of imperial Russia?

Tinubu-Buhari Partnership and Opposition’s Desperate Search for Validation

As Sahel Junta Leaders Go for Broke…

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

– Advertisement –

– Advertisement –

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow

Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

[mc4wp_form]
Popular News

Bauchi inaugurates strategic grains reserve committee to tackle food insecurity

Editor Editor November 5, 2024
Thousands flee homes as midnight explosions rock Maiduguri
Atiku accuses Tinubu of shady Lagos-Calabar Highway Project to ‘siphon’ public funds
FG to build 500 housing units in Kaduna to address deficit
Free circumcision for 1,000 children begins in Kaduna
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image
Global Coronavirus Cases

Confirmed

0

Death

0

More Information:Covid-19 Statistics

Categories

  • News
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Energy
  • World News
  • Africa News

Brief About US

Reputed in professionally promoting and defending the general good of citizens and society, by prioritising good governance and protecting the rule of law.

Subscribe US

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

[mc4wp_form]
© CitizenshipDaily | All Rights Reserved | Designed by AuspiceWeb
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?