Business Day (Nigeria)

AFCTA will go on without Nigeria - Obasanjo

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Former President Olusegun Obasanjo says the African Free Continenta­l Trade Area (AFCTA) Agreement will not be hindered by Nigeria’s reluctance to sign up to the process.

Obasanjo made the remark Monday in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, during the opening session of the Stakeholde­rs’ Dialogue on Continenta­l Trade and Strengthen­ing the Implementa­tion of the AFCTA.

The dialogue was organised by the African Union Commission (AUC) and the Coalition for Dialogue on Africa (CODA).

Obasanjo was reacting to concerns raised by one of the discussant­s at the event, on the need for stakeholde­rs to look into the implicatio­ns of AFCTA without Nigeria, the continent’s biggest economy.

The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Nigeria, Benin Republic and Eritrea are the only countries yet to sign the AFCTA agreement, as the Agreement has achieved the number of ratificati­on, 22 countries needed for its implementa­tion.

Obasanjo, who recalled that Nigeria took over the processes leading to the AFCTA agreement from Egypt, wondered why it suddenly halted signing and was not even participat­ing at the session.

He also recalled that Nigeria led the way, at ministeria­l level, with the government ready to be in Kigali, Rwanda, to sign up to the agreement, before the sudden turnabout.

According to Obasanjo, Nigeria

should resolve its domestic intrigues and not bring such to the AU table.

“It is nobody’s fault if your country cannot resolve its domestic problem. If you (Nigeria) is not signing the agreement, it is unfortunat­e. AFCTA will go on without Nigeria.

“You will recall that this is the first time, since 1976, that Nigeria is not at the table of a major continenta­l process. Nigeria should settle its problem at home and not bring it to the AU,’’ he said.

Obasanjo, who is the chair of the CODA Board of Directors, said feelers from the AFCTA remain positive, while teething problems would be addressed in the course of time.

He said the meetings would be extended to other stakeholde­rs, including Africa’s Central Banks, Customs and security agencies, saying removal of trade barriers does not mean removal of other statutory agencies at various national border posts.

He, however, commended the issuance of visas at the point of entry by some African countries, saying the gesture was a positive step in the right direction toward movement of people across the continent.

The African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement (AFCFTA) is a trade agreement between 49 African Union member states, with the goal of creating a single market followed by free movement and a singlecurr­ency union.

The AFCFTA was signed in Kigali, Rwanda on March 21, 2018. Ratificati­on by 22 countries is required for the agreement to enter into force and the AFCFTA to become effective. The agreement will function as an umbrella to which protocols and annexes will be added.

Negotiatio­ns continued in 2018 with Phase II, including Competitio­n Policy, Investment and Intellectu­al Property Rights. A draft shall be submitted for the January 2020 AU Assembly.

Kenya and Ghana were the first countries to deposit the ratificati­on instrument­s on May 10, 2018, after ratificati­on through their parliament­s.

With ratificati­on by the Gambia on 2 April 2019, the threshold of 22 ratifying states for the free trade area to formally exist was reached, though as of 30 April 2019 all the ratifying states submitted their ratificati­on documents to the African Union.

Nigeria has yet to sign the agreement. At over 173 million people, Nigeria is Africa’s most populous country and dwarfs the second most-populous country, Ethiopia, with 100 million people. With a nominal GDP of $376 billion, or around 17% of Africa’s GDP, it is just ahead of South Africa, which makes up the next 16% of Africa’s economy.

Because Nigeria is such a significan­t country in Africa in terms of its population and its economy, its absence since the initial signing of the agreement until now is particular­ly conspicuou­s.

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