Saturday, April 27

Lifting Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger Sanctions Will Save ECOWAS From Disintegrating-NIIA Expert

An international relations expert, Femi Otubanjo, says the decision of ECOWAS to lift sanctions imposed on Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso will save the West African sub-regional bloc from disintegration.

Mr Otubanjo, a research professor at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, made the assertion in an interview in Lagos.

Gambia’s Omar Touray, president of the ECOWAS Commission, announced the lifting of the sanctions at the end of the extraordinary session of the heads of state and government of ECOWAS member countries on Saturday in Abuja.

Mr Touray said the decision was based on humanitarian considerations, the sanctions’ socio-economic impacts and the sub-region’s security.

“The authority has resolved to lift with immediate effect sanctions imposed on Niger and has lifted the closure of land and air borders between it and ECOWAS member- countries.

“No-fly-zone of all commercial flights to and from Niger is to be lifted. Suspension of all commercial and financial transactions between ECOWAS member-states and Niger are to be lifted,” Mr Touray announced, among other decisions.

Mr Touray also announced the lifting of sanctions regarding recruiting Malian citizens in statutory and professional positions within ECOWAS.

The sanctions were imposed over the unconstitutional takeover of government in the countries.

Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso, in January, announced their withdrawal from ECOWAS.

According to Mr Otubanjo, Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso, leaving ECOWAS will be against the spirit of the African brotherhood that led to the formation of the organisation.

“Sanctions generally will hurt the ordinary people, not the ones in government. When food, fuel and other essentials are not coming in, those in government are at an advantaged position and look after themselves, even in war situations,” he said.

Mr Otubanjo said that brotherhood remained important in West Africa.

He cited Nigeria’s long history of relations with Niger, emphasising the shared borders and strategic relationship, including the trans-Saharan gas pipeline running through Niger, Algeria to Europe, serving liquified gas, as well as the security of the Niger River used to generate electricity in Nigeria.

“Looking at the strategic connections among countries, there was that pressure to relieve the people from the burden of sanctions and try to work out some accommodations with the regimes.

“They didn’t envisage this type of hostile exit, so it has created a form of problem for the management of relations in ECOWAS, and one way of walking back to make sure things don’t degenerate was to lift the sanctions.

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