Béninois celebrate Nigeria’s opening of Seme border

By Valentine Amanze, Online Editor

Seme, the border town between Nigeria and Benin Republic, has become alive again.

This followed Nigeria’s announcement Wednesday that it was lifting the closure of its borders with neighbouring Benin and Niger imposed in August 2019 in a move it said would curb the smuggling of rice and other criminalities and bolster domestic agriculture.

Early Thursday, traders, taxi-drivers and goods carriers amassed on both sides of the Seme-Krake border, located along the Atlantic Ocean.

People were seen Thursday rejoicing and celebrating the announcement by the Nigerian government to reopen the border.

They said the closure caused hardship to the residents and businessmen on both sides of the devide.

“I am so emotional. I want to cry,” said Jacqueline Watchinou, a reseller who had to pick up work as a house cleaner to support her family to AFP.

“Last night we had a party to celebrate,” she said, hoping the reopening would end her financial troubles.

In the town’s small restaurants, people cheered joyfully, as women nearby draped in colourful clothes brought wooden chairs to sit on and wait.

A handful of people were able to cross but “this morning, Nigerians apparently stopped letting people through,” said a worried trader, Brice Biokou, told AFP.

A Beninese border official told AFP they were waiting for “an official notification” to fully reopen.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari stunned his country’s neighbours when he unexpectedly closed the borders, saying the time had come to crush the contraband trade.

Major impact

The unilateral move was criticised for violating commercial and freedom of movement treaties signed under the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

The closure had a major impact on Nigeria, heavily reliant on imports to feed a booming population of some 200 million people.

Huge quantities of frozen chicken, rice, fabric but also cars that arrive in Cotonou are shipped or smuggled into Nigeria.

For its part, Benin relies heavily on cheap oil imports from its neighbour, sold across the country in jerry cans along the roads.

The shutdown also had an impact on traders in Benin, a key exporter of foodstuffs to Africa’s most populous country.

With a recession on its hands, falling oil prices and an economy hit by the coronavirus pandemic, Nigeria was under pressure to reopen its borders.

Four border crossings were to “open immediately”, Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed said Wednesday: Seme, Ilela, Maitagari and Mfun.

“The remaining borders are directed to be reopened on or before 31st of December, 2020,” Ahmed said in a statement.

Under the new instructions, the ban on rice and poultry imports remains in place.

But even so, many in Seme-Krake, are hopeful that business will soon resume.

“I’m eager to start shipping my goods to Nigeria,” Midonignon Agbogninoi, who has been transporting goods across the border for 22 years, said.

“I’m thrilled. I’ve heard everything would be in order by the end of the day.”

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