The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has officially launched the System Interconnected Management of Goods in Transit (SIGMAT), a homegrown digital customs platform designed to transform trade and the movement of goods across the borders of West Africa.
The launch held in Monrovia followed a one-day technical meeting of customs experts from Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, and Guinea, who gathered to finalize preparations for the platform’s rollout. Developed by ECOWAS, SIGMAT serves as a real-time customs data exchange system that enhances transparency, speeds up transit processing, and strengthens regional integration by linking customs operations across member states.
During a live demonstration of the system, Bazzie Akoi, Supervisor of the LRA ASYCUDA Functional Team and also SIGMAT Functional Focal Person, explained that the platform functions as a centralized digital hub connecting national customs systems.
He reported that with the coming of the system online, importers, exporters, and customs agents can now submit declarations electronically through the SIGMAT portal, standardizing documentation across ECOWAS member states and eliminating redundant paperwork that has long delayed border crossings.
Performing the launch over the weekend at the Mamba Point Hotel in Monrovia, H.E. Ambassador Josephine Nkrumah, Resident Representative of the President of the ECOWAS Commission in Liberia, described SIGMAT as a major leap toward addressing long-standing barriers to trade and efficiency across the subregion.
“Once fully operational, the SIGMAT platform will revolutionize regional trade by simplifying customs transit procedures, increasing efficiency, and reducing costs through the use of modern ICT,” she said.
Ambassador Nkrumah commended GIZ and stakeholders and partners for their technical and financial support, reaffirming ECOWAS’ commitment to automating all trade corridors to make regional economies more competitive and integrated.
Echoing similar sentiments, Dr. Kalilou Sylla, ECOWAS Commissioner for Economic Affairs and Agriculture, hailed the initiative as a transformative step in overhauling the region’s transit systems.
“The deployment of SIGMAT represents a major step toward making our regional trade corridors more efficient, attractive, and transparent for the private sector and customs administrations,” he noted.
Liberia Revenue Authority Customs Commissioner, Saa Samoi, termed SIGMAT “a significant milestone in customs modernization,” emphasizing its potential to harmonize transit systems and curb smuggling, fraud, and revenue leakage.
Colonel Major Bouagba Brice, Inspector General of Customs Côte d’Ivoire, and Mohamed Lamine Traoré, Technical Assistant to the Director General of Customs Guinea, lauded the cross-border collaboration and called for firm implementation to ensure SIGMAT delivers tangible benefits for trade facilitation.
Also speaking, Wilmot A. Reeves, Deputy Director for Trade at Liberia’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry, thanked ECOWAS and partners—especially the LRA—for their leadership in connecting Liberia to the platform, which he said will make border transactions faster, safer, and more transparent. He expressed hope that neighboring Sierra Leone will join the SIGMAT program very soon.
The SIGMAT platform is expected to reduce customs clearance times by up to 80%, lower trade costs, and significantly improve the movement of goods across borders. The system issues electronic transit documents that are tracked in real time, ensuring proper coordination of duties and taxes while reducing the risks of cargo diversion.
Beyond efficiency, the system is designed to strengthen trust between customs administrations and the private sector by providing end-to-end visibility of goods in transit. For instance, a shipment traveling from Abidjan to Monrovia can now be monitored digitally, with automated alerts for transport movements or route deviations.
What makes SIGMAT particularly notable is its homegrown design initiated in Côte d’Ivoire. It is built by ECOWAS for ECOWAS as the platform seeks to address the specific needs and challenges of West African trade corridors.
As of May 2025, nine ECOWAS member states had integrated SIGMAT into their customs online systems, with Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea, and Liberia forming the latest corridor in the rollout. This corridor links coastal and landlocked countries, addressing one of the region’s biggest economic bottlenecks.
The platform’s integration with ASYCUDA, the United Nations’ global customs management system already used by 12 ECOWAS states, provides a strong foundation for expansion and sustainability.
ECOWAS launched SIGMAT in 2019, with momentum accelerating after the adoption of the Supplementary Act on ECOWAS Community Transit in December 2021. The initiative aligns with ECOWAS’ broader vision for regional digitalization, trade facilitation, and economic integration.
For Liberia, hosting this launch marks another step in reasserting its leadership in regional cooperation and digital transformation. The successful implementation of SIGMAT is expected to position the country as a more reliable trade partner and transit hub in West Africa.
SIGMAT embodies ECOWAS’ vision of turning borders into connectors rather than barriers—where goods move efficiently, trade thrives, and regional integration becomes a practical reality powered by technology.
																								
												
											
																								
												
											
																								
												
											
																								
												
											
																								
												
											
																								
												
											
																								
												
											Liberia Revenue Authority
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