Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has berated President Muhammadu Buhari over his refusal to sign the Africa Continental Free Tree Area (AfCFTA) agreement, describing the act as disappointing.
Forty-Four African countries had signed the historic free-trade zone agreement last week in Kigali, Rwanda with Nigeria conspicuously missing. It is the largest in the world since the creation of the World Trade Organisation in 1995. The African countries seek to form a $2.5 trillion continental free-trade zone.
Explaining its decision not to sign, the federal government had said a committee was reviewing the treaty and that it needs more input from stakeholders.
Speaking on Tuesday during a presidential panel at the Africa CEO Forum in Cote d’Ivoire, Obasanjo said: “That President Buhari didn’t sign the free trade agreement in Kigali is disappointing; I hope he signs it before it is too late.
“Egypt started the discussion on the formation of the Organisation of African Unity but didn’t conclude it and Nigeria took over. Nigeria was also central to the discussion of the free trade agreement, but I am surprised that the country withdrew from signing.”
Prior to the signing of the agreement, the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) had advised the federal government to exercise caution.
MAN urged the government to renegotiate trade conditions that will impede economic growth in its review of the AfCFTA agreement.
“We are afraid that the rules of origin cannot be adequately enforced because goods from the EU can find their way into one of the African countries that have bilateral agreement with the EU,” Frank Jacob, president of MAN, had said.
“When the goods get into the African country, they can repackage them, change the label from made in Europe to that of the African country.
“That same goods will surely find its way to Nigeria which is the main target market for the EU.”