By John Ikani
West African leaders are gearing up for a crucial summit focused on the future of regional integration.
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) President Omar Touray announced the special summit during the 52nd Ordinary Session of the ECOWAS Mediation and Security Council (MSC) held in Abuja on Wednesday.
President Touray emphasized the need for the summit due to the complex challenges hindering regional cohesion and integration.
He highlighted the ever-changing geopolitical landscape and ongoing development hurdles as key factors prompting this high-level meeting.
“As we celebrate 49 years of our collective regional integration journey, our region continues to face numerous interconnected threats, some existential in nature, posing significant obstacles,” President Touray stated.
He elaborated on the specific challenges plaguing different parts of West Africa. The Sahel region, for instance, grapples with climate change, man-made crises, terrorism, and violent extremism.
Meanwhile, the Gulf of Guinea battles issues like illegal fishing, drug trafficking, and toxic waste dumping, all of which negatively impact livelihoods.
Governance deficiencies and marginalization were also identified as factors straining social contracts and fueling political rivalries, competition for resources, organized crime, and violence.
In response to these pressing issues, President Touray announced that the ECOWAS Commission has initiated technical preparations for the special summit. This inclusive gathering aims to address the future of regional integration in West Africa.
The summit’s agenda is being shaped through discussions. ECOWAS ambassadors previously met on June 29th, 2024, during the MSC session, to discuss the subregion’s security situation.
They also deliberated on the commission’s ongoing efforts in the areas of politics, security, humanitarian aid, and preventive diplomacy.
President Touray revealed that the summit will consider several crucial documents, including the report from the 40th MSC meeting at the ambassadorial level, a memorandum on the subregion’s political, peace, and security situations, and a memorandum on operationalizing the ECOWAS security architecture.
In addition, a presentation of the report from the meeting of finance and defence ministers will be included on the agenda.
Expressing confidence in the summit’s outcome, President Touray believes the deliberations will culminate in well-informed conclusions and constructive recommendations for the ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government.