Ecowas may call emergency meeting over Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso
The juntas
The Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas),
headquartered in Nigerian capital Abuja, could call an emergency summit to
discuss the withdrawal of Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso from the regional bloc.
Ecowas may not have the leverage to stop them leaving.
The decision to depart is seen as a major test for current Ecowas
chair, Nigeria, whose President Bola Tinubu has sought to re-assert the
country's position as the dominant regional power.
Ecowas, which has been trying to negotiate with the Niger junta
leaders, has previously said it was ready to deploy troops to restore
constitutional order if diplomatic efforts fail.
The bloc is yet to carry out its threat.
Defying pressure by leaders of the Ecowas to restore
constitutional rule, junta leaders of Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso said on
Sunday they were quitting the regional bloc.
The decision is a blow to regional integration after the bloc
suspended the three countries following military takeovers.
WHY DID THE
THREE COUNTRIES LEAVE THE BLOC?
The juntas said in a joint statement that ECOWAS had drifted
from the ideals of its "founding fathers and the spirit of
Pan-Africanism," and accused the bloc of failing to assist in their fight
against Islamist insurgents and ending insecurity.
Ecowas has imposed a raft of economic, political and financial
sanctions on the three in a bid to force them to return to constitutional
order, but that has only hardened their position.
The juntas called the sanctions illegal and inhumane.
CAN A MEMBER STATE LEAVE ECOWAS?
Under Article 91 of the ECOWAS Treaty, a member state can only
withdraw its membership after giving a written one-year notice and abides by
its provisions during that period. It is unclear for now if the three intend to
do so.
WHAT WOULD BE
THE IMPACT
Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso are landlocked countries that depend on ports in their ECOWAS neighbours for imports and exports. Leaving the bloc could see an increase in tariffs and could impact the free movement of their citizens and financial flows within the rest of the bloc.

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