ABSTRACT.
The purpose of my research is to
examine the roles and contributions of nigeria in the development of regional
organization with ECOWAS as the case study Primary and secondary sources of
data were used in the collection and collation of data Which was generated from
relevant empirical literature, government documents, gazettes and series of
unstructured and informal interviews with few Nigerian diplomats who were
present or have participated in ECOWAS regional development and decision making
phases And this enabled the total capturing of the study Nigeria has played a
major role in achieving ECOWAS objectives and it's original objectives is based
on regional organization. The primary objective for the creation of ECOWAS as
regional organization was the attainment of regional economic development,
although, the challenges of regional security threats have been a constant
concern of ECOWAS countries. In fact Nigeria as a country had been a major
source of assistance in achieving the sole objective of the formation of this
organization which has one way or the other provided the necessary assistance
the member states and Africa in general In terms of regional security nigeria
has contributed immensely to the regional security and development through
provision of soldiers for ECOMOG. Nigeria has the strongest military in terms
of her support for ECOMOG and judging by the disputes and wars between and
within countries in which Nigeria has intervened. Nigeria has played a major
role in the stabilisation of regional organization formation and security with
the region of West Africa and Africa as a whole. This study also explored the
inter agency frame work for conflict analysis (IAFCA) a frame work developed by
the UN working group UNDG-ECHA and it focuses on three important elements
peacekeeping: conflict analysis, response and strategic and program planning.
This framework is useful for this study analysing Nigeria's keeping roles in
West Africa with reference to ECOMOG. Nigeria has contributed enormously to the
regional and sub regional resolution of conflicts which has cost the country
billions of dollars and also man power (soldiers).
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1
Background of the Study
Regional organizations are a
subcategory of international organization; they can be financial and
nonfinancial institutions. They consist of those supranational institutions
whose members are governments or monetary authorities of economies that are
located in a specific region of the world. Regional organizations, for
instance, Currency Union Central Banks (CUCB), are created for many purposes
include supporting, guiding, and even governing aspects of the economic
relationships or integration processes among the regions‘ economies. As with
other international organizations, regional organizations such as Economic
Community Of West Africa States (ECOWAS) are established by political agreement
among organization members that has the status of international treaties, and
are accorded appropriate privileges and immunities and are not subject to the
laws and regulations of the economies in which they are located.
In practice also, the UN has begun to
work with regional and intergovernmental organizations. Some of these
organizations, like OSCE, AU, ECOWAS and NATO, have made conflict prevention
part of their core mandates and have assumed active roles in selected
conflicts. NATO and the UN have been involved jointly in conflicts in the
Balkans, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq. ECOWAS and the UN have played a
significant role in Liberia where ECOWAS created a military observer group
(ECOMOG) in 1990. It has also deployed forces to Sierra Leone (1998), Guinea
Bissau (1998), Côte d‘Ivoire (2002). The UN Operation in Liberia (UNOMIL), set
up in 1993, became the first operation to be undertaken in cooperation with a
peacekeeping operation established by another organisation, in this case
ECOWAS. More recently, the AU has been involved in Chad, Côte d‘Ivoire and most
importantly in Darfur. In this regard resolution 1706 which mandated innovative
and substantial UN assistance to AU Mission in Sudan (AMIS) is a possible
benchmark for the future (Abba, 2000). The Economic Community of West African
States (ECOWAS) is a regional organization of a group of fifteen West African
countries in November 1975.It has its secretariat and headquarters in Abuja.
Nigeria. The original objectives of the organization as contained in the ECOWAS
treaty are among other things to promote co-operation and regional integration
leading to the establishment of an economic union in West Africa in order to
raise the standards of living of its people and to maintain economic stability.
Established in 1975 originally as a regional organization to essentially
promote the economic integration of the fifteen Member States, the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has been gradually transformed, under
the pressure of political events, into an organization also responsible for
finding solutions to armed conflicts and other political crisis which were
undermining peace and security within the community space (Adebayo, 2007).
Basically, looking at the roles and
relevance of Nigeria in regional organisation of ECOWAS was strategically set
to achieve this objective, to a large extent hampered by political crisis in
the region and rivalries between heads of states for the leadership of regional
organizations, there was the need to gradually attach greater importance to
peace, defense and security issues Aluko, 1981; Rhodes, 1995). The decade of
the 1990‘s has been particularly decisive for ECOWAS evolution into an
organization capable of intervening diplomatically and militarily in cases of
serious threats to the security of a member state and within the community
space in general ECOWAS consequently played a key role in the arduous
resolution of protracted and devastating civil wars in Liberia (1990-1997 and
2003-2007) and Sierra Leone (1991-2002) which sometimes spilled over into
guinea and threatened to cause unrest in the entire west Africa region. ECOWAS
Ceasefire Monitoring Group drawn from the Nigerian federal army and other
member states of the organization. This was also seen in the Malian crisis to
prevent the spilling of the crisis into other parts of West Africa especially
Mali‘s neighboring countries.
According to Olakounle, (2010) it was
several years of ECOMOG‘s military presence under extremely difficult material
and security conditions and at the instigation of the regional military power;
Nigeria that Sierra Leone and Liberia received United Nations Peacekeeping
operation. ECOMOG was indeed accused of behaving as a warring party to the
fighting conflict in Liberia and Sierra Leone or as an occupation force.
However, its presence at the height of the fighting and chaos in these two
countries, when there was no peace to be maintained played a major role in the
stabilization of the Mano River basin region. ECOWAS was led to intervene
vigorously in the management of conflict in the 1990s before establishing the
institutional and operational basis of a regional mechanism for peace and
security supported by the texts of the organization.
This study is an analysis of Nigeria‘s
roles, and strategic actions on ECOWAS as a regional organisation. Nigeria acts
in her capacity as an individual state and as a member of the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS). Nigeria‘s roles towards ECOWAS can
be traced as far back as 1960 and even before then. The motivation for this
inquiry stems from a need to understand the dynamics of regional peacekeeping
particularly in relation to West African peacekeeping missions. It is against
this backdrop that this study critically examines the roles and contribution of
Nigeria in the development of regional organisation with focus on Economic
Community of West Africa States based on challenges and coping strategies
resorted to as means of survival in the society.
1.2 Statement of the Problem
Nigeria as a country has contributed
in the development of regional organisation. The weaker states in the West
African region had difficulty mobilising the resources required to deal
decisively with the Liberian crisis, becoming overwhelmingly dependent upon one
regional power to sustain the operation (Offiong and Idise, 2000). The ECOMOG
operation occurred at a difficult time for the states in the region, when they
themselves were involved in painful economic reforms and their own legitimacy,
in most cases, was subject to internal criticism and pressures. The intervention
was also complicated by linguistic and geopolitical rivalries and by cleavages
within ECOWAS itself, and undermined by debilitating arguments about its
legitimacy and organisation.
Coetzee, (2008) observed that these
difficulties were partially due to the fact that ECOWAS and its member
countries, like the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), had been notoriously
slow to take issues of regional security seriously. Long standing mutual
security protocols that should have allowed ECOWAS to anticipate crises were
not implemented. Regionalism also proved as much a source of weakness as of
strength in the operation: its advantages were genuine interest (as well as
self-interest) in the issues and intimate knowledge of the local political
terrain (both necessary for sustained and meaningful engagement); its
disadvantages were the danger of partisanship and the lack of neutrality and,
in the ECOWAS case, the militarisation of existing regional conflicts and
cleavages (Belmakhi, 2005). In other words, regional (or sub-regional) actors
are liable to be both too close to the issues and too interested in the
outcomes. International intervention was ultimately required to break the
deadlock.
Despite the fact that many studies
have been conducted in areas pertaining ECOWAS roles in regional development
but little have been done on the contributory roles of Nigeria in developing
the regional organisation as expected. However, an array of articles and
research can be found on the influence of ECOWAS on regional security. Most of
these discourses and researches (Adebayo 2007; Oche, 1999; Ate and Akinterinwa,
1992) usually focus on the roles of Nigeria to ECOWAS as a regional
organization. Hence, little is still known and understood about the
determinants of ECOWAS structure as a regional organisation and its development
to West Africa and Africa at large. This research therefore seeks to focus on
the roles and contribution of Nigeria in the development of regional
organisations in Africa,with ECOWAS as a case study
1.3 Objectives of the study
These are the objectives of the study;
What are the roles Nigeria played in
the formation of ECOWAS?
What are the challenges Nigeria faced
in the development of ECOWAS?
What are the contributions of Nigeria
in the development of ECOWAS and what are the ways it is using to solve the
challenges being face?
1.4 Objectives of the Study
The general objective of this study is
to examine the roles and contribution of Nigeria in the development of regional
development with focus on Economic Community of West Africa States The specific
objectives are to:
Assess the roles Nigeria played in the
establishment of ECOWAS.
Examine the contributions of Nigeria
to the development of ECOWAS since its formation.
Analyse the challenges faced by
Nigeria in maintaining and fostering the development of ECOWAS.
TOPIC: ROLES AND CONTRIBUTIONS OF NIGERIA IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF REGIONAL ORGANISATION: A CASE STUDY OF ECOWAS
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
Price: 3000 NGN
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