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ECOWAS urges member states to reopen airports & seaports

Following a meeting of UEMOA and ECOWAS Heads of State, the President of the UEMOA Commission made the following proposal for the opening of borders

airport and seaport gambia

ECOWAS Secretariat has mandated all ECOWAS member states to reopen their airports and seaports by the 31st July, 2020.

Following a meeting of UEMOA and ECOWAS Heads of State, the President of the UEMOA Commission made the following proposal for the opening of borders:

July 1: opening of ECOWAS land borders
July 15: opening of air borders in the ECOWAS region
July 15: opening of maritime borders
July 22: opening of air borders with all African countries
August 1: opening of air borders with other continents – International

Meanwhile, West African government ministers have proposed re-opening borders between their countries in the first half of July and allowing in travellers from other countries with low or controlled levels of coronavirus spread by the end of July.

Countries across the 15-country ECOWAS trade bloc have imposed varying levels of travel restrictions in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, with many shutting their borders entirely.

The new proposal, contained in an ECOWAS summary of a virtual meeting of foreign and trade ministers last week, called for coordinated efforts to re-open cross-border trade that has been crippled by coronavirus restrictions.

It said a first phase consisting of opening up domestic air and land transport should be implemented this month. Many governments in the region have already begun to do so.

A second phase, involving the opening of land, air and maritime borders within the region, should happen by July 15 at the latest.

A third phase, involving the opening of air and land borders to “countries with low and controlled levels of COVID-19 contamination rates”, should occur by July 31 but will depend on the evolution of the pandemic, the report said.

The ministers’ recommendations will be presented to ECOWAS heads of state at a forthcoming summit, it said.

African governments have struggled since the start of the outbreak to strike a balance between containing the virus and maintaining the day-to-day economic activities that millions of their citizens depend on to survive.

African countries have registered relatively few cases compared to hotspots elsewhere in the world, but the World Health Organization warned last week that the pandemic was accelerating on the continent.

Source: CGTN Africa