In an interview with FRANCE 24 on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York, Julius Maada Bio, the president of Sierra Leone and chairman of ECOWAS, stressed that Africa was not represented fairly in the UN when โ70 percent of the decisions of the issues before the Security Council are mostly about Africaโ. Asked about the three military-run countries that left ECOWAS back in January, he said he was โengaging each and every one of themโ, in order to bring security back to West Africa and boost economic integration.
Speaking to FRANCE 24, Bio reiterated that Africa was excluded from international organisations and that it was โthe only continent not represented on a permanent levelโ at the United Nations. According to Bio, Africaโs representation in the UN is โlong overdueโ, given that decisions are being made about its future without โour inputโ. โWe want two permanent seats and two additional seats at the non-permanent level,โ he stated.
Asked about Africaโs input on issues like debt cancellation, Bio said: โWe have been excluded from most things, and the international financial institutions are no exception.โ Calling for reform of the latter, he said: โWe have solutions that are quite practical to our situation, and we should have a voiceโ.
โBringing security backโ
Bio became the chairman of the West African regional bloc ECOWAS in June, a role he is due to hold for a year. Regarding the three countries that went through military coups and formally left ECOWAS back in January โ Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger โ Bio plans a different approach to what ECOWAS has done before, which mainly involved sanctions and threats of military intervention.
โWe have to give it (ECOWAS) a new lease of lifeโ, Bio said. โI want us to play a major role in bringing security back, in making sure that the insecurity that they (Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger) suffer at the moment is taken care of, but that means very tight engagement with all of them,โ he said.
Bio added that he is in contact with the coup leaders and plans to visit all of them. In fact, he recently met with the coup leader of Burkina Faso, Captain Ibrahim Traorรฉ. According to Bio, Traorรฉ was โresponsiveโ to this new approach and โvery happyโ that the head of ECOWAS met with him to understand Burkina Fasoโs situation.
Asked whether this approach might legitimise the coup leaders, Bio said that with โthe level of insecurity that is present in these countries, I think we have to prioritise security and then maintain or intensify our economic integration programmes with them, making sure that they are part of ECOWAS.โ
He added: โOf course, we have to share the same values of democracy. But we canโt do this if we do not engage them. They have to see or endure the benefits or the dividends of democracy.โ