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Republic of The Gambia: President Barrow and Other Heads of State Attend the 67th Ordinary Session of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)
Republic of The Gambia: President Barrow and Other Heads of State Attend the 67th Ordinary Session of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)

Zawya

time19 hours ago

  • Business
  • Zawya

Republic of The Gambia: President Barrow and Other Heads of State Attend the 67th Ordinary Session of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)

His Excellency President Adama Barrow has joined other regional leaders at the Ordinary Session of Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Heads of State and Government in the capital city of Nigeria, Abuja. The Summit reviewed the State of the Community, economic cooperation, security and broader sub-regional developments. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu chaired the Summit and reaffirmed Nigeria's continuous commitment to ECOWAS regional peace and security responses. He took pride in the completion of the ECOWAS military logistics depot in Lungi, Sierra Leone, and called for the ECOWAS Standby Force concept to be translated into reality to serve as a regional counter-terrorism pillar. Response to external security threats in the sub-region require effective collaborations among ECOWAS member states and partners. President Tinubu commended ECOWAS for implementing fundamental policies such as common external tariff, protocol on free movement of goods, services and people to stimulate development and cooperation. Moreover, he called for an enabling environment to empower private sectors, remove trade barriers and create necessary conditions for investment, entrepreneurship and innovation to flourish. As President Tinubu concluded his tenure at the 67th ECOWAS Summit, he handed over the Emblem to the newly elected Chair of ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government H.E. Maada Bio, President of the Republic of Sierra Leone. Delivering his inaugural speech, President Bio promised to prioritize four key areas, namely: restoring constitutional order and deepening democracy, revitalizing regional security cooperation, unlocking economic integration and building institutional credibility. Other speakers included H.E. Leonardo Santos Simão, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), and H.E. Amb. Bankole Adeoye, Commissioner Political Affairs, Peace and Security of the African Union Commission. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Office of The President- Republic of the Gambia.

West African leaders admit security woes mounting in region
West African leaders admit security woes mounting in region

Japan Today

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Japan Today

West African leaders admit security woes mounting in region

Maada Bio acknowledged the challenges the region faced as he assumed the ECOWAS chairmanship By Emmanuel ANULE Leaders from the west African bloc ECOWAS on Sunday admitted during talks in the Nigerian capital that the region was in trouble, facing mounting unrest and political instability. "Our region is at the crossroads," said Sierra Leone's Julius Maada Bio as he took over the rotating chairmanship of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) from Nigeria's Bola Tinubu. West Africa is "facing serious challenges, some long-standing others new and evolving", he said. They included "insecurity in the Sahel and coastal states, terrorism, political instability, illicit arms flow and transnational organised crimes". It was time to "overhaul our collective security architecture" including intelligence-sharing and rapid response, he added. "The democratic space is under strain in parts of our region -- the constitutional order has been disrupted." Coups and attempted putsches have rocked nearly half of the original ECOWAS member states in the last decade, straining relations between neighbours. Three junta-led countries -- Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger -- quit the bloc earlier this year, setting up their own alliances. Jihadists exploiting strained relationships between regional countries are gaining ground in the Sahel and Lake Chad region. They have recently intensified offensives in the Sahel region, staging bloody raids in Mali, incursions into major cities in Burkina Faso and inflicting heavy army losses in Niger. Summit host Nigeria has also witnessed a spike in attacks in recent weeks, targeting both villagers and military bases. In his speech, outgoing ECOWAS chair Tinubu spoke of the "stark and consistent challenges that continue to impede our aspirations... violent extremism and other cross-border crimes that have continued to widen" and intensify. The three Sahel states' military juntas pledged during the coups that brought them to power to make security a priority. But, like their predecessors, they are struggling to contain the advance of jihadists, who are threatening neighbouring countries on the west African coast more than ever. Tinubu said that under his leadership ECOWAS "deployed all diplomatic means" to engage the three countries and expressed confidence "that before too long, they may return" to the bloc. The three countries have so far formed a confederation called the Alliance of Sahel States (AES). Earlier this year they announced the creation of a joint 5,000-strong force for joint military operations. ECOWAS leaders in August 2023 mustered plans to create a military "standby force" aimed at fighting against terrorism and transnational crimes. At the time it was announced, it was aimed at the junta leaders in Niger who had toppled the sitting president. Tinubu said ECOWAS "must act decisively to operationalise the standby force in the fight against terrorism to serve as an instrument for peace and stability for our region." "I am a little bit worried about the slow pace of its activation, which is taking longer than desired," said Tinubu. ECOWAS did not give a timeline of when it would be operational, but the organization has a long history of military interventions having deployed since the 1990s in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Mali, Ivory Coast, the Gambia and Guinea Bissau. © 2025 AFP

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