April 18, 2024

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Botswana and Comoros latest countries to ratify the AfCTA agreement

In a show of growing support for the AfCFTA, the two countries ratified the agreement during the 36th Ordinary Session of the AU, bringing the tally of member state ratifications to 46.

Bonface Orucho, bird story agency

The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), which aims to create a single market for goods and services in Africa, got another boost after two more countries handed over instruments of ratification to the African Union Commission Chairperson, Moussa Faki Mahamat, during February’s session of the African Union.

Instruments of ratification are documents by which a state expresses its consent to be bound by a treaty.

Botswana and Comoros became the 45th and 46th state party members of the AfCFTA after depositing their instruments of ratification on the sidelines of the 36th Ordinary Session of the AU held between February 18 and 19, 2023, in Addis Ababa.

The theme of this year’s summit was The Year of AfCFTA: Acceleration of the African Continental Free Trade Area Implementation.

“We have ratified the AfCFTA and SACU (Southern African Customs Union) has also placed its offer on tariff removal on goods to the AfCFTA,” said Botswana’s Trade and Industry minister, Mmusi Kgafela.

“I am waiting for the offer to be verified, after which Batswana can start trading under AfCFTA by exporting goods duty-free. It might take a month or so to complete this work,” added Kgafela.

Wamkele Mene, Secretary-General of the AfCTA secretariat, revealed in a Twitter post that South Sudan could be next in line to ratify the agreement.

“I met Deng Dau Malek, South Sudan Foreign Affairs Minister… he shared that South Sudan’s ratification process would be completed within 3 months,” Mene wrote.

While Botswana and Comoros await verification and admission, the two ratifications serve as a much-needed filip after ratification delays that have limited full exploitation.

The ratifications also raise hopes for a fully integrated African market and point to a promising future for the union’s Agenda 2063.

The focus now shifts to the preparedness among SMEs and businesses that will drive intra-continental trade when the agreement is fully in force.

According to Botswana President Mokgweetsi Masisi, “It’s launch time…they better get to business, get to work and all we have to do is facilitate and enhance that,” he noted, challenging SMEs in Africa.

With the agreement’s establishing clauses requiring 24 ratifications by member state parties to be in motion, the AfCFTA is already rolling, with several African countries already partaking in the pilot programme.

However, delayed ratification by some signatories has limited the full realisation of the continental common market.

The two parties increased the ratified parties’ percentage to 85%, with only Morocco, Libya, Sudan, South Sudan, Mozambique, and Madagascar still to ratify the agreement.

Despite completing domestic ratification, Somalia is yet to submit its ratification instruments.

“We shall leave no stone unturned to ensure that AfCFTA becomes a reality,” Comoros President Azali Assoumani, who took over as rotating AU chairman, told the closing session.

The African Continental Free Trade Area aims to reduce all trade costs – including eliminating 90% of tariffs – and enable Africa to integrate further into global supply chains.

bird story agency

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