Benin Republic Laments Nigerian Border Closure Dozens of
baskets brimming with newly-picked tomatoes gently rot in the sticky
heat, becoming the latest casualty in a bout of trade tension between
Benin and Nigeria.
AFP Cotonou -Dozens of baskets brimming with
newly-picked tomatoes gently rot in the sticky heat, becoming the latest
casualty in a bout of trade tension between Benin and Nigeria.
On
August 19, President Muhammadu Buhari unexpectedly closed Nigeria’s
borders to goods trade with Benin and Niger, declaring the time had come
to end rampant smuggling from those countries.
In Benin, Nigeria’s neighbour to the west, traders say the impact has been devastating.
“This
is a distressing sight,” Agriculture Minister Gaston Dossouhoui said
this month, visiting markets in the town of Grand Popo, one of the main
agricultural communities of southern Benin.
“It’s very difficult for our producers. It’s a disaster.”
“Financially
speaking, Benin’s small producers are under water — they’ve already had
to run up millions (of CFA francs) in debt,” said Adjeoda Amoussou,
head of Benin’s Chamber of Agriculture.
Buhari defended the
closure by saying Benin and Niger — Nigeria’s neighbour to the northeast
— had failed to police their borders properly, and chronic smuggling
was the result.
“The borders will remain closed until our
neighbours control what goes through the borders and comply with the
laws,” warned Hameed Ali, comptroller general of the Nigeria Customs
Service.
The move immediately caused a shockwave.
Unilateral
border closures go against all commercial and freedom of movement
treaties signed under the Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS).
The announcement also cast a shadow over a historic
free-trade agreement, signed by 54 out of 55 African countries, that
reached a key operational threshold just five weeks earlier.
Nigeria,
as well as Benin, had signed onto the pact on the eve of the landmark
day — a move hailed as a crucial push towards ending the continent’s
trade barriers.
– David and Goliath –
That smuggling goes on is clear, although it goes in both directions.
Huge
quantities of frozen chickens, rice, fabric and cars arrive at the port
of Cotonou, Benin’s economic capital, where they are taxed locally
before being routed — often illegally — to Nigeria.
Benin has few
functioning petrol stations, and its fuel is far more expensive than in
Nigeria, where it is subsidised by the state. A common sight is
smuggled Nigerian petrol, sold by the side of the road in jerrycans.
Beyond contraband, though, trade with Nigeria is crucial for Benin and Niger.
Ranking
among the world’s poorest countries, they find themselves as David
opposite the Nigerian Goliath — a market of 190 million and Africa’s
biggest economy.
– ‘Fear of God’ –
In Benin, business
people in some parts of the economy are panicking, and unfounded rumours
that Nigeria will even go so far as to cut off its electricity supply
are spreading in local newspapers.
“Buhari and his country want
to put an end to us,” said Barthelemy Agon, a pineapple producer. He
like many others have been hard-hit by fruits and vegetables no longer
being exported to their big neighbour.
As for taxi and truck
drivers, it’s barely worth the effort to hit the road since a litre of
imported contraband fuel has risen by about one euro ($1.10) since the
frontier was closed.
“We are suffering seriously from this
situation — without petrol we can’t do anything,” said Aristide Samson
Assogba, a motorcycle taxi driver.
Sebastien Deguenonvo in
Cotonou’s Casse-Auto district said sales of his low-quality diesel had
slumped from at least 30 26-litre (six-gallon) cans per day to just 10.
“I beg the Nigerian president to have pity on us,” he said.
But
if his stoney reputation is anything to go by, Buhari — an ex-general
an ex-general whose first spell as Nigeria’s leader, in the 1980s, came
after a coup — is unlikely to be merciful.
“President Buhari
should be a little bit afraid of God,” said Henry Assogba from the
National Association of Petrol Sellers. “The big one cannot live without
the little one.”
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