West African leaders set deadlines for 'recalcitrant' coup-hit states
West Africa has been rocked by two coups in Mali, one in Guinea and one in Burkina Faso since August 2020, tarnishing its reputation as a model of democratic progress in Africa
West Africa's main political and economic bloc said on Friday it would give Mali's military transitional government 12 to 16 months to arrange elections and offered Guinea's ruling junta a month to propose a democratic transition timeline.
After a summit in Accra, leaders of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) also agreed to ask Burkina Faso's interim leaders to reduce a proposed transition of 36 months to a "more acceptable timeline," the bloc's Commission President Jean Claude Kassi Brou told a news conference.
West Africa has been rocked by two coups in Mali, one in Guinea and one in Burkina Faso since August 2020, tarnishing its reputation as a model of democratic progress in Africa.
The 15-nation ECOWAS has repeatedly condemned the putsches and is trying to bring power back into civilian hands. "
Our democratic values must be preserved," Kassi Brou said. "Some countries are going through challenges, but we must address those challenges collectively."
ECOWAS has already imposed sanctions on Guinea and Mali for dragging their feet on restoring constitutional order.
Kassi Brou said those measures would be gradually lifted in Mali if its leaders respected the 12- to 16-month ultimatum. Harsher penalties will hit Guinea if it misses its own 25 April deadline, he warned.
"We have no idea when the transition [in Guinea] will end and this creates tensions in the region and inside the country," he said.
Mali's interim government failed on a promise to hold elections in February and first said it would keep ruling until at least 2025, which was then revised down to 24 months.
Guinea, whose ex-President Alpha Conde was overthrown in September, has yet to lay out handover plans.
Meanwhile, Burkina Faso's junta, which took over in January, has proposed relinquishing power after three years, raising eyebrows in ECOWAS.
Before Friday's meeting the bloc's chair, Ghanaian President Akufo-Addo, said it was "time to take stock of where we are with our three recalcitrant member states."
Sanctions in Mali have already severed the country's access to regional financial markets, caused job losses and contributed to its default on about $180 million in debt payments.
Burkina Faso, which has so far been spared, will also face sanctions if the junta does not release ex-President Roch Kabore from house arrest within the next month, Kassi Brou said.