Ghana’s President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo yesterday
described the closure of the land border between Nigeria and the Republic of
Benin as a big blow to regional integration.
Commenting for the first time since the Nigerian government
closed its border with the Republic of Benin on August 20, Akufo-Addo said the
move could negatively affect the regional integration agenda.
President Nana stated this at a meeting with a delegation
from the First Bank of Nigeria at the Jubilee House in Accra. He said “We are about to enter a delicate
period in the ECOWAS journey looking ahead of the possibility of a single
currency and trying to forge greater integration among our economies and at the
same time have important security and other issues which confront us.
“We have this business of the closure of the Benin Border,
which seems to some people to be a big blow to the ECOWAS project”.
Akufo-Addo argued that overall interest of member states
should override individual national interest. “I believe that there are other
considerations that we ahave to look at and examine to find a way so that we
can live in this region in harmony and allow each one of us our national
ambition to be fulfilled,” he added. The
chairman of the First Bank of Nigeria, Chief Oba Otudeko, affirmed that
Akufo-Addo’s government’s economic policies, particularly banking reforms, had
made the Ghanaian economy resilient.
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