West Africa regional bloc approves exit timeline for 3 coup-hit member
states
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[December 16, 2024]
By CHINEDU ASADU
ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — West Africa’s regional bloc ECOWAS approved Sunday
an exit timeline for three coup-hit nations after a nearly yearlong
process of mediation to avert the unprecedented disintegration of the
grouping.
In a first in the 15-nation bloc’s nearly 50 years of existence, the
military juntas of Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso announced in January
that they decided to leave ECOWAS, accusing it of “inhumane and
irresponsible” coup-related sanctions and of failing to help them solve
their internal security crises.
“The authority decides to set the period from 29 January, 2025 to 29
July 2025 as a transitional period and to keep ECOWAS doors open to the
three countries during the transition period,” ECOWAS Commission
President Omar Alieu Touray said in his closing remarks Sunday at the
summit of regional heads of state in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja.
The three coup-hit countries have largely rebuffed ECOWAS’ efforts to
reverse their withdrawal. They have started to consider how to issue
travel documents separately from ECOWAS and are forming their own
alliance. The one-year notice for their departure is expected to be
completed in January.
Touray commended efforts by the bloc's envoys to resolve the crisis.
“These efforts underscore your collective commitment to preserving peace
and unity in our region,” he said.
Bola Tinubu, the president of Nigeria and chairman of ECOWAS, said the
challenges faced around the world and in the region test its ability to
work together. “We must not lose sight of our fundamental
responsibility, which is to protect our citizens and create an enabling
environment where they can prosper,” he said.
One major benefit of being a member of ECOWAS is visa-free movement to
member states, and it is not clear how that could change after the three
countries leave the bloc. Asked about such an implication in July, the
ECOWAS commission president said: “When you get out of an agreement ...
if it is about free trade, free movement of people, the risk of losing
those concessions remains.”
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On Saturday, the three countries said in a joint statement that
while access to their territories would remain visa-free for other
West African citizens, they “reserve the right … to refuse entry to
any ECOWAS national falling into the category of inadmissible
immigrants.”
As West Africa's top political authority since it was formed in
1975, such a division is ECOWAS' biggest challenge since inception,
said Babacar Ndiaye, senior fellow with the Senegal-based Timbuktu
Institute for Peace Studies.
The chances of ECOWAS getting the three countries back into their
fold are slim mostly because the bloc wants a quick return to
democracy, which the juntas have not committed to, said Mucahid
Durmaz, a senior analyst at global risk consultancy Verisk
Maplecroft. Allowing the juntas to remain in power “could risk
further regional fragmentation” while recognizing them as legitimate
authorities would represent “a serious departure from ECOWAS’s
founding principles,” Durmaz said.
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The regional bloc also failed to manage the situation in the best
possible way, he said.
“The bloc’s inconsistent responses to coups in the region have given
an impression that its stance is influenced more by the political
ambitions of member states than by its founding principles of
promoting democratic governance,” Durmaz said.
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Associated Press journalist Baba Ahmed in Bamako, Mali, contributed.
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