January 10, 2022
1 min read

ECOWAS announces ‘harsher’ sanctions in Mali

The leadership of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has announced a flurry of ‘harsher’ sanctions on Mali…reports Asian Lite News

Leaders of ECOWAS gathered in an extraordinary summit to deliberate on the situation in Mali, Xinhua news agency reported.

In the communique after the summit, the regional body said the proposed chronogram by the Malian transitional authorities that set the duration of the transition for a total of five and a half years is “totally unacceptable.”

The communique said all ECOWAS member states would immediately withdraw their ambassadors from Mali.

“The other sanctions include the closure of land and air borders between ECOWAS countries and Mali, the suspension of all financial and economic transactions between ECOWAS member states and Mali, with the exception of essential consumer goods,” said the communique.

The sanctions specifically excluded the supply of pharmaceutical and medical supplies, including materials needed for the control of Covid-19, petroleum products, and electricity.

ALSO READ: South Africa’s Parliament fire flares up again

ECOWAS instructed the freeze of all assets of Mali in the ECOWAS central bank, a freeze of assets of the Malian state, state enterprises, and parastatals in commercial banks, and the suspension of Mali from all financial assistance and transactions from all financial institutions.

The ECOWAS authority instructed all community institutions to take steps to implement the sanctions with immediate effect.

“The sanctions will be gradually lifted only after an acceptable and agreed chronogram is finalized and monitored satisfactory progress is realized in the implementation of the chronogram for the elections,” the communique added.

ECOWAS explained that the sanctions were necessary to facilitate the process of the return to constitutional rule in Mali, which is necessary for peace, stability, and growth as well as to protect the populations.

Last November, ECOWAS imposed sanctions on the Malian transitional authorities in response to their claim of inability to meet the transition deadline of February 2022 for holding elections, including a travel ban and a freeze on financial assets.

Previous Story

Israel permits food stores to sell Covid self-test kits

Next Story

Thirty kidnapped students regain freedom after six months in Nigeria

Latest from Africa News

Aboulela awarded PEN Pinter prize

Born to an Egyptian mother and Sudanese father, Aboulela grew up in a Khartoum where British colonial echoes mingled with the call to prayer Sudanese-British novelist Leila Aboulela has been named winner

India seeks cooperation with Africa

Addressing the Joint Session of the Namibian Parliament, Modi noted that India’s development partnership in Africa is worth more than $12 billion …reports Asian Lite News Hailing the relations between India and Africa,

India, Namibia Ink health, entrepreneurship MOUs

The African nation is the first country to enter into a licensing agreement to adopt UPI technology…reports Asian Lite News Following their discussions on further strengthening bilateral ties, Prime Minister Narendra Modi

PM Modi in Namibia for Landmark Visit

PM Modi Arrives in Namibia for First Official Visit…reports Asian Lite News Prime Minister Narendra Modi touched down in Windhoek on Wednesday, beginning his maiden official visit to the southern African nation

Kenyans put president on notice

Kenya’s fifth president became a remarkably unpopular leader barely two years into his presidency after proposing aggressive tax measures that many saw as a betrayal of his campaign promise to support working-class
Go toTop

Don't Miss

193 countries adopts the first global agreement on the Ethics of AI

All the nations members of the UN Educational, Scientific and

Sisi, Bennett discuss bilateral ties, Palestine

The visit marked the first by an Israeli Prime Minister