Obasanjo slams Buhari for not signing Africa free trade deal
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has
decried the failure of President Muhammadu Buhari to sign the Africa
Continental Free Trade Area agreement, expressing hope that he will
change his mind before it is too late.
Obasanjo poured out his mind on the
AfCFTA during a presidential panel, titled: ‘When Leaders Make History’
at the Africa CEO Forum in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire on Tuesday. He was
joined by the President of Zimbabwe, Emerson Mnangagwa.
Obasanjo said, “That President Buhari
didn’t sign the free trade agreement in Kigali is disappointing; I hope
he signs it before it is too late.
“Egypt started the discussion on the
formation of the Organisation of African Unity but didn’t conclude it
and Nigeria took over. Nigeria was also central to the discussion of the
free trade agreement, but I am surprised that the country withdrew from
signing.”
The AfCFTA treaty is one of the flagship
projects of the African Union Agenda 2063, and is aimed at creating a
single continental market for goods and services, with free movement of
business persons, investments and a single currency.
Also, the agreement commits countries to
removing tariffs on 90 per cent of goods and to liberalise services,
while items identified as sensitive, which make up the balance 10 per
cent, will also be phased out later as tariff-free.
But the President, Manufacturers
Association of Nigeria, Dr. Frank Jacobs, said the government’s
enforcement mechanism in the area of enforcement of rules of origin
needed to be clearly defined before local producers could support the
agreement.
It is believed that the AfCFTA treaty would improve intra-African trade and enhance economic growth and sustainable development.
The Federal Government had delayed the
signing of the treaty to allow for more deliberations and input from
stakeholders and had set up a committee on the issue before the
President would sign the treaty.
Speaking on the need for increased youth
and women participation in politics in Africa, Obasanjo, who zeroed in
on Nigeria, stated, “In our own part of the world, we have not done
enough in this regard. Since independence, we have never had any woman
as president and VP; no woman has contested governorship election and
won.
“In the coming dispensation, all organs
of political parties should have 30 per cent slots for women, 30 per
cent for the youth, and 40 per cent for the others.”
He said it was disheartening that the number of the women in the National Assembly was still very insignificant.
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