At 50, ecowas teeters amid shifting alliances and security woes

At 50, ecowas teeters amid shifting alliances and security woes


Play all audios:


Coups and attempted putsches - driven by widespread public discontent and distrust in political elites - have rocked nearly half of original ECOWAS countries in the last decade, putting


democracy on the ropes and straining relations among neighbours. The departure of the three countries from ECOWAS dealt a blow to the bloc's credibility and regional influence, experts


say. The exit "is a major dent on this organisation's capacity to harness the optimism and hopes of its birth", said Kwesi Aning, an expert in international cooperation at the


Accra-based Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre. "It reflects a disastrous level of leadership amongst ECOWAS leaders," he added. TURMOIL AND TRADE


Nigeria's President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the current head of the rotating ECOWAS presidency, and the 89-year-old ECOWAS co-founder and former Nigerian military leader, General Yakubu


Gowon, are due to address the gathering at a hotel in Lagos. As the region's largest economy and most populous nation, Nigeria was expected to be ECOWAS's "stabilising


force", but it is "faltering", said SBM Intelligence in a report released Wednesday. "Its internal crises — including economic mismanagement, political instability, the


Boko Haram insurgency, and governance failures — have significantly diminished its ability to lead", said the report. Overall, ECOWAS "finds itself at a critical juncture between


its foundational aspirations of economic integration and peace and the stark realities of regional insecurity, democratic backsliding, and internal fragmentation," said SBM


Intelligence. The impact of the turmoil on trade among countries is stark. Before relations between neighbours Nigeria and Niger soured following a coup in Niamey in July 2023, Nigerian


traders shipped out several truckloads of edible grains from the bustling Dawanau market in the northwestern state of Kano daily. While the volume of grains supplied from the Kano market


into Niger has not changed much, it is the cost of doing so that is now biting. Multiple traders and truckers told _AFP_ in Kano that taxes paid on Nigerian goods imported into Niger have


increased fivefold, fuelling a spike in smuggling activities across porous borders. "We were paying an equivalent of 100,000 naira (about $64) as import duty on each truck before they


left ECOWAS, but we now pay around 500,000 naira," said 40-year-old trucker Aliyu Abubakar. "Smuggling is thriving," said Mustapha Buhari, 47, a resident of Nigeria's


Mai-Adua, a border town.