Regional bloc, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has confirmed that four countries in the region discussed democratic transition and regional security.
The leaders of Niger, Guinea-Bissau, and Benin met with Nigerian President, Bola Tinubu in Abuja on Tuesday.
Their subject of discourse included the developments in Mali, one of the countries under a military junta, where the UN mission (MINUSMA), created in 2013 to support the country threatened by the jihadist push, recently stopped operations and evacuated its troops.
In reaction, ECOWAS has created a task force to identify alternative security solutions, including the potential deployment of soldiers from member states.
Omar Alieu Touray, President of the ECOWAS Commission, told the press in Abuja that Patrice Talon, the President of Benin, would soon visit Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea on behalf of this task group to talk about security and democratic transitions after the coups.
The four nations gathered in Abuja “reaffirmed their support for these countries’ swift democratic transitions,” he continued. He said, without going into greater detail, that “they are committed to giving a firm reaction” in terms of security, maybe including the deployment of troops from ECOWAS nations.
Terrorist activities are gaining ground in the Sahel, extending their attacks south to countries in the Gulf of Guinea. Countries like Ghana and the Republic of Benin have also been in the spotlight lately over the possible expansion of the insurgency in the erstwhile “peaceful” countries.