Leaders of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on Sunday lifted economic and financial sanctions imposed on Mali, after its military rulers proposed a 24-month transition to democracy and published a new electoral law.
The bloc imposed stiff sanctions on Mali in January after the junta said it would not organize democratic elections the following month as initially planned.
ECOWAS Commission President Jean Claude Kassi Brou said that the sanctions will be lifted immediately. Borders with Mali will reopen and regional diplomats will return to Bamako.
“However, the heads of state decided to maintain individual sanctions, and the suspension of Mali from ECOWAS, until the return to constitutional rule,” Kassi Brou said.
The individual sanctions targeted members of the ruling junta and the transitional council.
Mali has defaulted on over $300 million of its debt due to the sanctions, which cut it off from the regional financial market and the regional central bank.
The West African leaders meeting in Accra also accepted a pledge from the junta that seized power in Burkina Faso in January to restore constitutional order in 24 months.
Kassi Brou said that after a lengthy discussion with the coup leaders, a new proposal for a 24-month transition was more acceptable.
The UN Security Council holds its first meeting on developments on Mali at the Security Council Chamber on Thursday after being suspended for seven months due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Photo: Xinhua