Obasanjo seeks stronger economic ties among African countries

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, on Tuesday called on African countries to pool their resources together toward forming stronger pan-African economic ties.

Obasanjo made the call in Lagos at the commemoration of Angola’s National Founder and Hero’s Day 2024, marked annually on Sept. 17.

The event was held to celebrate the legacy of Angola’s first President, Agostinho Neto, who proclaimed the country’s independence on Nov. 11, 1975.

The event, with the theme, “Pan-Africanism in the Political Course by Agostinho Neto”, was organised by the Embassy of Angola in Nigeria.

NNetowho died in Moscow at the age of 56 and was Angola’s president from 1975 to 1979.

In his address, Obasanjo highlighted various pan-African struggles.

One of the things we tend to do as humans is forget the past and our leaders who made sacrifices for what we are enjoying today.

“We have achieved political and cultural pan-Africanism to an extent, but now we have to focus on the economic liberation of Africa.

“I want to talk about the economic aspect which seems like we have yet to pay enough attention to until now when our leaders started to introduce African Continental Free Trade Agreements.

Our pan-Africanism must be strong. When we were formulating the charter for a new African Union (AU) from Organisation of African Unity (OAU), we dwelt more on economic ties,” he said.

Obasanjo, a former AU chairman, stressed the importance of stronger economic ties for the growth of Africa.

“One of the things we have been doing is struggling for the economic emancipation of Africa but we have not done this too well.

We should ask ourselves, why did we have slave trade? It is because some nations want energy to develop their new world and make money.

“The slave trade was substituted with colonialism and then exploitation to develop other continents. We got others, but they are still withholding economic power.