Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger Launch Their Own Bank: A Bold Step Toward Financial Independence


Ibrahim Traore, Assimi Goitor, and Abdourahamane Tchiani


In a historic move, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger have announced the creation of their own joint bank, a significant step toward reducing reliance on Western financial systems, particularly the CFA franc. This decision marks a pivotal moment for these nations as they continue to assert their sovereignty and reshape their economic futures.


Why Is This Special?

This bank is unique because it is a shared financial institution between the three nations, reflecting their deepening alliance. But how did this collaboration become possible?


The Birth of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES)

On July 6, 2024, Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger officially formed a confederation known as the Alliance of Sahel States (AES). This alliance was born out of a shared frustration with foreign influence, particularly from France, and a desire to chart their own economic and political course.

Leaders like Mali’s Assimi Goïta, Burkina Faso’s Ibrahim Traoré, and Niger’s Abdourahamane Tiani have been vocal about breaking free from colonial-era dependencies. Their partnership is not just symbolic it’s a strategic move to strengthen regional autonomy.


The Purpose of the New Bank

The newly established bank has two primary objectives:

Financing Development Projects: The bank will fund infrastructure, energy, and other critical sectors to boost economic growth.

Reducing Dependence on the CFA Franc: For decades, these nations used the CFA franc, a currency tied to France’s financial system. By creating their own financial institution, they aim to reclaim monetary control.


Breaking Free from Colonial Economic Chains

The CFA franc has long been a contentious issue in former French colonies. When France granted independence to its African colonies in the 1960s, it imposed conditions:

French military bases remained in these countries.


The CFA franc was introduced, pegged to the French treasury, ensuring continued economic dominance.


For years, this system allowed France to maintain influence over these nations’ economies, controlling trade, mining rights, and even access to their own resources.


The Turning Point: Rejecting Foreign Exploitation

Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger have had enough. Their people have suffered despite being rich in resources like gold, uranium, and oil. For example:

Niger supplies uranium to France, yet many of its citizens lack electricity and must import power from Nigeria.

Mali and Burkina Faso are major gold producers, but profits often benefited foreign corporations rather than local development.


After recent coups, these nations rejected Western-backed leaders and formed their own alliance. When ECOWAS (the Economic Community of West African States) threatened military intervention to restore ousted Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum, Mali and Burkina Faso stood firm, declaring that an attack on Niger would mean war with all three.


Progress Since the Alliance

Since forming the AES, these nations have taken bold steps:

Mali revised its mining code to increase state revenue from gold (a $2 billion industry) and now produces its own weapons and military vehicles.

Burkina Faso raised mining royalties from 10% to 15%, funding infrastructure like solar plants and roads.


All three are working toward a shared currency to replace the CFA franc.


Why Other African Nations Should Embrace This Bold Step

The creation of a joint bank by Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger isn't just a financial decision—it's a declaration of sovereignty. By shedding dependency on colonial-era systems like the CFA franc and forming institutions built by and for Africans, these nations are laying the groundwork for true economic freedom. This model promotes regional cooperation, self-financing of development, and the reclaiming of natural resource profits for local benefit.


For other African countries, emulating this path could mean: Escaping external economic control, harnessing resources for national development, creating united regional blocks with stronger negotiation power, building trust and independence in their financial systems


This is not just about breaking chains—it’s about forging new ones built on unity, ownership, and self-determination. The AES bank is a blueprint, and the time for replication is now.


The decision by Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger to launch their own joint bank is more than a financial maneuver; it's a historic stand for self-reliance, unity, and economic liberation. In breaking away from the CFA franc and asserting control over their own resources, these nations are redefining what true independence looks like in the 21st century. Their bold steps serve as a blueprint for other African countries to follow, proving that when nations come together with a shared vision, they can reclaim their destiny and build systems that serve their people first. Africa’s future belongs to those brave enough to shape it.









Monday, May 5, 2025

Leadership in Contrast: Ghana’s Push for Accountability vs. Togo’s Slide Into Autocracy

Ghana President: John Mahama Vs Togo President: Faure Gnassingbe


  When it comes to governance in Africa, two neighboring countries are taking radically different paths. Ghana is making serious efforts to fight corruption and promote transparency, while Togo is sliding backward, replacing democracy with what amounts to a family dictatorship. The contrast couldn’t be starker, and the consequences will shape these two nations and the entire region.


Ghana’s Push for Accountability: A Step in the Right Direction

President Mahama’s government has introduced a Code of Conduct for political appointees, and it’s one of the strongest anti-corruption measures we’ve seen in West Africa. Here’s what it does right:

Bans conflicts of interest—no awarding contracts to friends or family.

Requires public officials to declare their assets so citizens can track wealth accumulation.

Mandates quarterly performance reports—keeping leaders accountable for results.


Yes, there have been hiccups—some officials missed the deadline for asset declarations. But the fact that the government is naming and shaming those who ignore the rules shows real commitment. This isn’t just about laws on paper; it’s about changing the culture of governance.

Ghana isn’t perfect, but it’s trying. And that effort matters—because when leaders are held accountable, economies grow, investors feel confident, and citizens trust their government.


Togo’s Dangerous Slide Into Autocracy

While Ghana is strengthening democracy, Togo is dismantling it. President Faure Gnassingbé, whose family has ruled for 58 years, just rewrote the constitution to stay in power indefinitely. Here’s how he did it:

Abolished presidential elections, replacing them with a system where parliament (which his party controls) picks the leader.

Created a new role for himself—"President of the Council of Ministers"—with no term limits.

Reduced the actual presidency to a ceremonial position, making his power permanent.


This isn’t just politics—it’s a constitutional coup. And it will have devastating consequences:

Economically, investors avoid dictatorships. Togo’s growth will suffer.

Socially, young people are already frustrated. Many will leave, taking their skills elsewhere.

Politically, unrest is inevitable. History shows that when leaders refuse to leave power, the people eventually force them out, often violently.


The Hypocrisy of the International Community

What’s just as shocking as Togo’s power grab is the silence from world leaders. France, Togo’s former colonizer, says nothing. The African Union and ECOWAS issue weak statements but take no real action.

Meanwhile, these same organizations are quick to condemn military coups. But a slow-motion coup by law? They look the other way.


Two Paths for Africa’s Future

Ghana and Togo show us two possible futures for Africa:

✅ Ghana’s path: Build institutions, enforce rules, and let democracy work—even if progress is slow.

❌ Togo’s path: Let one family control everything, ignore the people, and wait for the inevitable collapse.


The choice is clear. Accountability leads to stability. Autocracy leads to crisis.


What Needs to Happen Now

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