Niger, Mali, B'Faso impose 0.5% tax on goods from Nigeria, others

The military regimes in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have imposed  a new 0.5 percent levy on imported goods from Nigeria and other Economic Community of West African States, ECOWAS, member-nations.

They also  demanded to finance a new three-state union after leaving the larger regional economic bloc, according to an official statement signed by the trio.

According to the  release, the levy was agreed on  last Friday and has become effective.

The levy, it said, would affect all goods imported from outside the three countries but would not include humanitarian aid.

‘’It will finance the activities of the bloc,’’ the statement said without giving further details.

The move has ended a   free trade across West Africa, which states have for decades fallen under the umbrella of the ECOWAS, and highlights the rift between the three states that border the Sahara Desert and influential democracies, such as Nigeria and Ghana, to the south.

The three countries, each ruled by military juntas that came to power through recent coups in 2023, had created  the Alliance of Sahel States, ASS, as a security agreement, following their exit from the ECOWAS bloc.


Over time, this alliance morphed  into a growing  economic union, with initiative  to bolster  deeper military and financial integration, including introducing biometric passports.

Last year, the three nations left ECOWAS,  referencing  claims that the bloc had not sufficiently supported them in fighting Islamist insurgencies and addressing insecurity in their countries.

In retaliation, ECOWAS had imposed economic, political and financial sanctions on the three in a bid to force them to return to constitutional order, to little effect.

The three countries have, however, formed a brickwall against efforts by ECOWAS, led by Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu, to get them back into the bloc.

Only last week, the Ghanaian President, John Mahama, reported to President Tinubu in Abuja that efforts to win them back were not yeilding the desired results.

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