MALI, Burkina Faso, and Niger have jointly announced the introduction of a 0.5 percent levy on all imported goods, a move aimed at financing their fledgling three-nation alliance. According to a joint statement cited by Reuters, the levy marks a significant step toward cementing their new partnership outside the broader ECOWAS regional bloc.
The countries, all ruled by military juntas that seized power through coups in recent years, officially broke ties with the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) earlier in 2025. Their newly formed coalition, known as the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), began as a security pact in 2023 and is now evolving into an ambitious economic and political union.
Funding a new regional vision
The new levy is expected to provide essential funding for the AES as it develops independent administrative and economic systems. This includes plans for a shared biometric passport system, closer military coordination, and unified economic strategies.
‘This contribution will allow the Alliance to strengthen its operational capacities and realise its integration objectives,’ the joint statement from the three governments said.
Officials say the import duty will be applied to all incoming goods and will serve as a sustainable funding mechanism for joint projects under the AES umbrella.
A break from ECOWAS
Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger have each faced heavy sanctions and isolation from ECOWAS following their respective military coups. Their decision to withdraw from the bloc earlier this year was framed as an act of sovereignty and resistance to foreign pressure.
Since then, the AES has taken shape as a regional alternative, with a strong anti-French and anti-Western stance in both rhetoric and policy. The trio have also sought closer ties with Russia and other non-Western powers, while ramping up military cooperation among themselves.
Toward a shared future
While the new 0.5 percent levy may appear modest, it signals the AES’s broader ambitions to reduce reliance on traditional West African structures and build a self-sustaining framework for governance, trade and security.
Economic analysts say the success of the levy and other integration efforts will depend on internal stability, public buy-in, and the bloc’s ability to attract new partners or supporters in the region.
With shared borders, overlapping security challenges, and deep economic ties, the three Sahel nations are attempting to carve out a new political identity amid a shifting West African landscape. The newly announced import levy is their latest declaration of intent.
As the Alliance of Sahel States moves forward with its integration plans, the region—and its global partners—will be watching closely.