The Guardian (Nigeria)

Morocco: ECOWAS membership controvers­y

- By Akinkuolie Rasheed •Ambassador rasheed was director of trade and investment, ministry of foreign affairs.

THE kingdom of Morocco left the Organisati­on of African Unity (OAU) now (AU) about 33 years ago to protest against the admission of Saharaoui Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) into the union. In January 2017, the Alawite Kingdom made a surprise return to the African Union (AU) and at the last summit of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) indicated its interest to join the community. Tunisia is also interested in joining ECOWAS while the return of Mauritania is almost imminent, as soon as all the formalitie­s are concluded.

The sudden interest of these countries in the African Union and ECOWAS is no surprise. The organisati­ons have become a success story. The AU had won the political struggle for the liberation of the continent from colonialis­m and imperialis­m and it has been tackling the daunting challenges of economic freedom in diverse ways, one of which is the creation of Regional Economic Communitie­s (RECS) to address the economic, political and security challenges of the continent at the regional level, before they merge to form an African Economic Community and Market.

The ECOWAS is one of these regional economic communitie­s. Others are the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS) for Central Africa, the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), the Arab Maghreb Union (UMA) and South African Developmen­t Community (SADC). These RECS are not exclusive clubs, but units of an entity which would come together, progressiv­ely with adjacent RECS fusing into a unit, until all the Regional Economic Communitie­s subsume into a continenta­l African Economic Community.

ECOWAS had turned out to be model and a good example of a successful community. It had maintained peace in the region through the ECOMOG, security arrangemen­t, establishe­d ECOWAS Parliament and Court, adopted common fiscal policies, common passport and removed restrictio­ns on the movement of goods and citizens in the region. Some of the RECS have not lived up to expectatio­ns. The unfortunat­e Arab Maghreb Union could be considered as technicall­y defunct because of irreconcil­able difference­s between member states, especially between Morocco and Algeria over Western Sahara. The collapse of Libya virtually ended the community. The trio of Morocco, Tunisia and Mauritania, erstwhile members of the defunct UMA are isolated and left in the lurch. This challenge may have influenced the quest of Morocco, Tunisia and Mauritania to join ECOWAS. This demarche does not contradict the charter and vision of the AU, which supports the integratio­n of adjacent RECS as a way of accelerati­ng the eventual full integratio­n of the continent.

The other states in the Maghreb should be encouraged to join ECOWAS to complete the absorption of UMA to ECOWAS.

Trans regional organisati­ons which cut across regions within the continent are not unusual, but common.

The Community of Sahel-saharan States (CEN-SAD) -with 24 state membership cuts across ECOWAS, ECCAS, COMESA, and UMA, countries. UEMOA, the Francophon­e monetary Zone cuts across ECOWAS and ECCAS. There are economic communitie­s of nations which share common interests and challenges at the internatio­nal level, and inter-continenta­l levels. D-8 countries which is an economic associatio­n of developing countries in Africa, Asia and the Middle East is another good example. It is the same with the South America- Africa Forum (ASACOF), which links the two continents to promote economic cooperatio­n which hitherto was insignific­ant, but increased exponentia­lly since the creation of the Forum.

In conclusion, Africa had won the political war of liberation from colonialis­m and imperialis­m, but, the challenges of economic freedom and Human Developmen­t Index (HDI) is a battle which must be won and can only be won, through concerted cooperatio­n, foresight and inclusion. The applicatio­n of Morocco and Tunisia to join ECOWAS is not an anomaly, but a reasonable desire to overcome the daunting challenges of underdevel­opment which should not be treated with cynicism.

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