• Why Nigeria signed the Samoa agreement – FG

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    Why Nigeria signed the Samoa agreement – FG

    Mohammed Idris Minister of Information

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    The Federal Government on Thursday said Nigeria signed the Samoa agreement because it was in the interest of the country.

    The government said the Samoa Agreement was nothing else, but a vital legal framework for cooperation between the Organisation of African, Caribbean, and Pacific States (OACPS) and the European Union, to promote sustainable development, fight climate change and its effects, generate investment opportunities, and foster collaboration among OACPS Member States at the international stage.

    Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, in a statement on Thursday said on 28 June 2024, Nigeria signed the Samoa Agreement at the OACPS Secretariat in Brussels, Belgium, saying the partnership agreement was between the EU and its Member States, on one hand, and the members of the OACPS on the other.

    “Negotiations on the agreement started in 2018, on the sidelines of the 73rd United Nations General Assembly. It was signed in Apia, Samoa on the 15th of November 2018 by all 27 EU Member states and 47 of the 79 OACPS Member states.

    “The agreement has 103 articles comprising a common foundational compact and three regional protocols, namely: Africa –EU; Caribbean-EU, and Pacific-EU Regional Protocols with each regional protocol addressing the peculiar issues of the regions.

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    “The African Regional Protocol consists of two parts. The first is the Framework for Cooperation, while the second deals with Areas of Cooperation, containing Inclusive and Sustainable Economic Growth and Development; Human and Social Development; Environment, Natural Resources Management, and Climate Change; Peace and Security; Human Rights, Democracy and Governance; and Migration and Mobility,” he explained.

    Idris said Nigeria signed the Agreement on Friday 28 June 2024 and was done after the extensive reviews and consultations by the Inter-ministerial Committee, convened by the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning (FMBEP) in collaboration with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) and Federal Ministry of Justice (FMOJ), confirmed that none of the 103 Articles and Provisions of the Agreement contravenes the 1999 Constitution as amended or laws of Nigeria.

    In addition, Idris stated that Nigeria’s endorsement was accompanied by a Statement of Declaration, dated 26th June 2024, clarifying its understanding and context of the Agreement within its jurisdiction to the effect that any provision that is inconsistent with the laws of Nigeria shall be invalid.

    “It is necessary to assure Nigerians that the President Bola Tinubu Administration, being a rule-based government will not enter into any international agreement that will be detrimental to the interest of the country and its citizens. In negotiating the Agreement, our officials strictly followed the mandates exchanged in 2018 between the EU and the OACPS for the process,” he said.

    The minister said only five of the 79 OACPS Member States, including Equatorial Guinea (Africa); Cuba, Trinidad and Tobago (Caribbean); Nauru; and Tuvalu (Pacific) were yet to sign the Agreement, saying all the 27 EU Member States signed on 15th November 2023.

     

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