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Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger are considering ditching CFA franc

BY AGENCIES

Burkina Faso’s military leader Ibrahim Traore has hinted that the West African country could ditch the Region's CFA Franc currency.

This follows the joint announcement between Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger last month that they were leaving the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, CFA Franc, ECOWAS
Sovereignty over everything — After leaving ECOWAS in January, the revolutionary trio of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger are mulling ditching the CFA Franc.



Having already kicked out French soldiers and rolled back a U.N. mission in Mali, these states have consistently shown they value sovereignty over expediency.

The head of the Niger’s junta, Abdourahamane Tiani, also echoed the same views during an interview on state television on Sunday.

"It's not just the currency. Anything that maintains us in slavery, we'll break those bonds," the 35-year-old army captain said in an interview posted on YouTube.

The head of the Niger’s junta, Abdourahamane Tiani, also echoed the same views during an interview on state television on Sunday, saying that abandoning the CFA Franc would be a sign of sovereignty and a necessary step and move from what he described as French colonisation.

Having already kicked out French soldiers and rolled back a U.N. mission in Mali, these states have consistently shown they value sovereignty over expediency.

“Money is a sign of sovereignty, and we are engaged in a process of recovering our total sovereignty. It is no longer a question of our states being the cash cow of France. France has robbed us of more than 107 years. We must work together to find the mechanisms that allow us to strengthen exchanges within our alliance,” Tiani said.

Economic experts have warned that dumping the CFA Franc would be riskier and significantly more complicated than pulling out from ECOWAS, a move seen as a bold and potentially ill-advised act.

Despite these concerns, finance ministers from the three countries are contemplating establishing a monetary union to help navigate the complexities of this potential shift.

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