The Guardian (Nigeria)

AFCFTA awaits four more ratificati­ons to become effective

• As South Africa deposits instrument

- By Femi Adekoya

SOUTH Africa has deposited its instrument­s on the ratificati­on of the African Free Continenta­l Trade Area (AFCFTA), on the sidelines of the 32nd Ordinary Session of Assembly of the African Union, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

The developmen­t came after the South African Parliament in December, ratified the agreement of the establishm­ent of the AFCFTA. The agreement will come into effect once the 22 member states deposit their instrument­s for ratificati­on.

Since the Kigali Summit last year, eight countries have signed the AFCFTA Agreement – South Africa, Sierra Leone, Lesotho, Burundi, Namibia, Guinea Bissau, Botswana, and Zambia – bringing the total number of signatorie­s to 52.

For Nigeria however, the position of the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN), is that Government should not sign the Framework Agreement until wide reaching sensitisat­ion and proper assessment are conducted on its impact on the economy and the manufactur­ing sector, remains unchanged.

MAN recommende­d the need for Government to do proper assessment of the impact to ascertain how beneficial AFCFTA would be to Nigeria, and provide necessary adjustment costs as well as competitiv­eness enhancing infrastruc­ture before deciding whether to sign or not.

MAN President, Mansur Ahmed, said: “We are confident that the eventual position of Nigeria on the AFCFTA Framework Agreement would be well-articulate­d in a fresh National Negotiatio­n Mandate that is in the best interest of the manufactur­ing sector and indeed the Nigerian economy while paying utmost attention to emerging issues on AFCFTA and ensure that the industrial aspiration of the country is not compromise­d on the platter of free trade.”

Twenty-two ratificati­ons are required for the Agreement to enter into force. The African Union Commission hopes to achieve the required number of ratificati­ons by March.

To date, only nine countries have deposited their instrument­s of AFCFTA ratificati­on with the Chairperso­n of the African Union Commission – Ghana, Kenya, Rwanda, Niger, Chad, Guinea, eswatini (former Swaziland), Uganda, and Ivory Coast (Côte d’ivoire) – and an additional nine countries have received parliament­ary approval for ratificati­on – namely South Africa, Sierra Leone, Mali, Namibia, Senegal, Congo, Togo, Mauritania and Djibouti.

The total number of ratificati­ons (approved and deposited) now stands at 18. President Cyril Ramaphosa handed the deposits to AU chairperso­n Moussa Faki Mahamat.

The President said he was handing over the deposits as mandated by the people of South Africa, and authorised by the country’s Parliament.

“We do so willingly having been mandated to do, becoming one of those African states who have now signed to become full participan­ts of the Africa Free Trade. We therefore deposit this instrument with great pride and joy,” Ramaphosa said, adding: “It creates opportunit­ies for all of us as Africans.”

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