CISLAC UK Urges Nigeria To Set Priorities In UK-Africa Trade Ties

Omotola Collins
6 Min Read

The Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), United Kingdom (UK), on Wednesday advocated total sincerity, openness, transparency and accountability in repatriation of various Nigeria’s illicit financial outflows in the coffer of the UK government into the country as the British Prime Minister, Theresa May, embarks on a trade mission to African continent this week.

The UK leader’s visit to Africa, is  part of the strategic diplomatic efforts by the UK Government to establish and deepen ties with nations ahead of the Britain’s exit from European Union in 2019. .

A statement issued by CISLAC Nigeria, Executive Director, Auwal Ibrahim Musa (Rafsanjani) made available to the media, quoted CISLAC UK as charging  the Nigerian government to prioritise mutual benefits, given cognisance to the country’s lingering but whopping sums—in custody and tax havens, stashed in the British economy awaiting repatriation, as such have tendency to adequately finance Nigeria’s poorly funded critical sectors and positively transform the economy.

The civil society advocacy group stated that it was not unaware that as Britain prepares to exit the European Union in 2019 being a fallout of the 2016 referendum, trade concerns in sustaining the UK economy afterwards had become the nation’s priority, almost beyond the issues of immigration it seemed to be all about in the beginning.

It stated further: “While trade could serve as a catalyst for economic and human development if trends in equity and fairness, but this underachieved in Africa, given the continent’s experience in trade relations with the West; as it is evident in 2005 Human Development Report revealing that “the trade barriers faced by developing countries exporting to rich countries are three times higher than those faced by rich countries when they trade with each other.

“The report also found that poor countries account for less than one-third of rich country imports but for two-thirds of tariff revenues collected, and calls such tariffs a “perverse taxation.

“In order to mitigate or avert the recurring colossal economic losses, CISLAC UK calls on African leaders to give serious concerns to the extent of mutual benefits/ opportunities and trade terms the UK government is willing to consent to under this new “partnership for opportunities”, the theme of the trade mission to South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya by Prime Minister Theresa May.

“We find it pertinent for the Nigerian government to propose a crucial way of forging ahead through an open, transparent and mutual relations with Nigeria like the swift return of the illicit funds of Nigeria in tax havens and in the custody of the UK government; as it is not a coincidence, that just after the Prime Minister embarked on this trip did the UK return £70 million pounds of such funds to the Nigeria government”, the UK-based civil advocacy group added.

CSLAC UK demanded robust dialogue between the Nigerian government with the visiting UK leader centred on returning all remaining illicit funds in UK government’s territory and a better coordination to block all loopholes in corporate financial laws that encourage illicit outflow of Nigeria.

It recalled that the Former Prime Minister David Cameron once referred to Nigeria as “fantastically corrupt”, to which President Buhari responded to in the fashion of a true statesman, that there is the need to look ahead, where both nations can work together when the UK fully throws its support behind the fight against corruption and efforts towards domestic resource mobilization by the Nigerian government.

To achieve this, the CSO stated that it would require the UK government taking demonstrable action and removing the red tapes but needed cooperation towards returning the remaining funds.

CISLAC UK charged African nations and Nigeria in particular to read the lines and lips of the visiting Prime Minister and discussions with her 29-man business team and negotiators that make up her entourage, which by the way at her first port of call South Africa she has hinted on the UK looking to invest up to £4 billion in the African economy come post Brexit, but at the notion of whining Africa of aid in return for investment and partnership.

It stated that it understood that currently, the UK comes third after the US and France in Africa trade investments, while all three remain behind China who since 2011 has remained Africa’s dominant investor is tagged and at better trading terms in all and already with talks of investing £4 billion pounds into the continents economy.

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