Burkina Faso ЁЯЗзЁЯЗл, Mali ЁЯЗ▓ЁЯЗ▒, Niger ЁЯЗ│ЁЯЗк To Form A New Alliance.

Three of the four ECOWAS suspended member-States under military rule Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have announced the formation of a separate organisation.

The foreign ministers of military-ruled Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger on Friday recommended creating a confederation as part of a long-term goal of uniting the West African neighbours within a federation.

Mali and Burkina, ruled by juntas who seized power in coups in 2020 and 2022 respectively, rushed to back NigerтАЩs military rulers when they ousted elected president Mohamed Bazoum in July.

They created a pact, the Alliance of Sahel States, setting up closer economic ties and mutual defence assistance if the sovereignty or territorial integrity of a member is threatened. In a joint statement following a two-day meeting in MaliтАЩs capital Bamako, the foreign ministers spoke of the тАЬgreat potential for peace, stability, diplomatic strength and economic development that a strengthened political alliance offersтАЭ.

тАЬThe ministers guided by the ambition to ultimately achieve a federation uniting Burkina, Mali and Niger recommend the creation of a confederation to the heads of state of the Alliance of Sahel States,тАЭ the statement said. Malian Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Diop said the conclusions will be submitted to their heads of state, who are due to meet in Bamako at an unspecified date. The Bamako meeting aimed to flesh out the workings of the new alliance, with the ministers emphasising the importance of diplomacy, defence and development тАЬto consolidate political and economic integrationтАЭ.

The countriesтАЩ economy and finance ministers last month recommended creating a stabilisation fund, an investment bank and a committee that would study an economic and monetary union, the statement added. Analysts say these developments must be troubling to ECOWAS, which has so far, failed to carry through its threat of military intervention to restore constitutional order in Niger following the 26 July army coup in that country.

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