Audio By Carbonatix
Nigeria will reopen its four border crossing points from 31st December.
This comes after more than a year since it closed its land borders to crack down on smuggling of goods.
At a cabinet meeting, the Muhammadu Buhari government approved the reopening of the four borders in the South West (Seme border) , North West (Illela and Maigatari border) and South South (Mfun border).
Africa’s populous nation closed its land borders last year to curb smuggling of goods particularly rice and arms, which it said had threatened efforts to boost local production and security.
But sky rocketing prices of goods, pushing inflation up to a 30-month high compelled the government to take a second look at the policy directive.
Nigeria which has the largest economy in Africa has been going through turbulent times due to the significant impact of covid-19.
Relying so heavily on crude oil exports, it is expected to record a negative growth for this year, which has thrown the economy into recession.
The closure of the Nigeria-Benin border saw Ghanaian exporters complaining bitterly over the impact on trading activities as well as their incomes.
President of the Ghana Union of Traders Association, Dr. Joseph Obeng, told Joy Business the closure of the borders should be a lesson to Nigeria because of its negative effects on its economy.
“Nigeria has just realized that it cannot live in isolation and that the opening of its borders is only at the instance of their citizenry who have come under a lot of pressure and suffering as a result of the closure. I’ve told you before that the goods that were locked up even at Benin, most of these goods belonged to Nigerians who have to come to other West African countries to buy their goods.”
He further said “its economy is trembling. Nigeria is in recession, its action has affected them negatively. This decision to reopen borders further confirms my argument that no country can operate or trade in isolation. It must be a lesson to them”.
Now Ghanaian traders and businesses will heave a sigh of relive as they can exports their goods to Nigeria as well bring in goods from the West African country.
Latest Stories
-
Police declare suspect wanted over double murder near Tema Golf City
7 minutes -
Two BECE candidates injured in Nkwanta South accident, return to sit exams
14 minutes -
Climate change is a national development challenge – Issifu Seidu
17 minutes -
Twins among four nabbed for BECE exam malpractice during Science paper
23 minutes -
BoG has no separate financial stability committee to check system risks – IMF
26 minutes -
CDD, IMANI, 12 other CSOs file to join Supreme Court case challenging OSP Act
44 minutes -
Africa must shape the future of global finance, not just follow — BoG Governor
45 minutes -
Ghana to host landmark global conference on reparatory justice following historic UN resolution
46 minutes -
The price of stability : Why Bank of Ghana is breaking its balance sheet to save your bread
50 minutes -
Africa must move beyond payments to unlock next phase of digital finance – BoG Governor
54 minutes -
BoG pushes Africa beyond digital payments as fintech regulation drive deepens
1 hour -
Human-to-human hantavirus transmission suspected on board stranded cruise ship, WHO says
1 hour -
Payments, identity, regulation and infrastructure key to Africa’s digital integration – Vice President
1 hour -
“Northern Ghana not a punishment ground” — Bernard Mornah demands Ocloo’s resignation over posting remarks
1 hour -
China calls for Strait to be reopened ‘as soon as possible’ in Iran talks
1 hour