The Prague Post - At 50, West African bloc teeters amid shifting alliances, security woes

EUR -
AED 4.292623
AFN 76.538025
ALL 96.709077
AMD 446.999572
ANG 2.091931
AOA 1071.686974
ARS 1642.663304
AUD 1.801886
AWG 2.103639
AZN 1.983464
BAM 1.962127
BBD 2.355104
BDT 142.419847
BGN 1.955333
BHD 0.44049
BIF 3447.631014
BMD 1.168688
BND 1.515079
BOB 8.07995
BRL 6.366197
BSD 1.169275
BTN 102.730258
BWP 15.617222
BYN 3.982725
BYR 22906.294196
BZD 2.351219
CAD 1.642148
CDF 2471.776204
CHF 0.927357
CLF 0.028467
CLP 1116.752286
CNY 8.325712
CNH 8.327665
COP 4514.059252
CRC 587.898215
CUC 1.168688
CUP 30.970245
CVE 110.733325
CZK 24.287799
DJF 207.699538
DKK 7.46804
DOP 74.007155
DZD 152.074032
EGP 55.638973
ERN 17.530327
ETB 173.314455
FJD 2.658591
FKP 0.872606
GBP 0.869744
GEL 3.161266
GGP 0.872606
GHS 12.974814
GIP 0.872606
GMD 84.146062
GNF 10142.465491
GTQ 8.955917
GYD 244.630447
HKD 9.081814
HNL 30.620807
HRK 7.534651
HTG 153.004022
HUF 389.814292
IDR 19363.999415
ILS 3.870656
IMP 0.872606
INR 102.830386
IQD 1530.981908
IRR 49172.567669
ISK 141.598206
JEP 0.872606
JMD 187.915942
JOD 0.828593
JPY 175.774222
KES 151.053196
KGS 102.201963
KHR 4703.970763
KMF 493.186187
KPW 1051.864875
KRW 1655.867778
KWD 0.357245
KYD 0.974371
KZT 627.844508
LAK 25354.6966
LBP 104656.053256
LKR 354.289388
LRD 214.103221
LSL 20.264758
LTL 3.450833
LVL 0.706928
LYD 6.345993
MAD 10.725637
MDL 19.72517
MGA 5276.628462
MKD 61.615183
MMK 2453.517342
MNT 4202.03966
MOP 9.361325
MRU 46.830807
MUR 52.829315
MVR 17.892601
MWK 2029.425398
MXN 21.549683
MYR 4.940632
MZN 74.678742
NAD 20.265245
NGN 1716.301167
NIO 42.786067
NOK 11.780783
NPR 164.367305
NZD 2.041823
OMR 0.449332
PAB 1.16904
PEN 3.957168
PGK 4.920598
PHP 67.836476
PKR 328.520252
PLN 4.247347
PYG 8267.588403
QAR 4.255487
RON 5.087064
RSD 117.129506
RUB 94.095775
RWF 1692.260918
SAR 4.383094
SBD 9.626922
SCR 16.30563
SDG 702.938445
SEK 11.019634
SGD 1.512168
SHP 0.876819
SLE 27.02051
SLL 24506.812519
SOS 667.902778
SRD 45.861094
STD 24189.491951
STN 24.980716
SVC 10.230946
SYP 15196.044569
SZL 20.265002
THB 37.98446
TJS 10.757311
TMT 4.09041
TND 3.416112
TOP 2.737191
TRY 49.001922
TTD 7.936456
TWD 35.79786
TZS 2865.109319
UAH 48.681969
UGX 4055.093147
USD 1.168688
UYU 46.951195
UZS 14240.469
VES 235.16075
VND 30777.411105
VUV 143.276583
WST 3.282874
XAF 658.05358
XAG 0.021602
XAU 0.00027
XCD 3.158439
XCG 2.107377
XDR 0.818745
XOF 656.803414
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.197988
ZAR 20.267221
ZMK 10519.599202
ZMW 26.450084
ZWL 376.317214
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75.55

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.72

    -0.08%

  • CMSD

    -0.1199

    24.09

    -0.5%

  • NGG

    0.8700

    75.9

    +1.15%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    16.56

    +0.18%

  • RELX

    0.2000

    45.22

    +0.44%

  • RYCEF

    0.3100

    15.3

    +2.03%

  • GSK

    -0.0100

    43.77

    -0.02%

  • JRI

    -0.1600

    13.78

    -1.16%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    68.75

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    -1.6000

    70.84

    -2.26%

  • AZN

    -1.0000

    83.83

    -1.19%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    11.48

    +0.7%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    23.69

    +0.17%

  • BTI

    0.3900

    51.14

    +0.76%

  • BP

    -0.5600

    32.78

    -1.71%

At 50, West African bloc teeters amid shifting alliances, security woes
At 50, West African bloc teeters amid shifting alliances, security woes / Photo: OLYMPIA DE MAISMONT - AFP

At 50, West African bloc teeters amid shifting alliances, security woes

Leaders of ECOWAS are gathering on Wednesday to celebrate 50 years since its formation and are expected to address regional security challenges as the continent also seeks answers in the face of US trade tariffs and aid cuts.

Text size:

The anniversary could not have come at the worst of moments for the Economic Community of West African States -- once internationally respected as a force for stability.

ECOWAS is now fractured following the departure of junta-led countries Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger earlier this year.

It is also grappling with its security challenges with jihadists exploiting strained relationships between members and gaining ground in the Sahel and Lake Chad region. Benin and Nigeria have experienced a wave of attacks in recent months.

And the Sahel region was in 2024 ranked the epicentre of global "terrorism" for the second straight year, accounting for more than half of deaths put down to terror attacks worldwide, according to the Global Terrorism Index published in March.

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.

V.Sedlak--TPP