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Court room. |
On Monday, October 23, 2023, in a stunning victory for Nigeria, the High Court in London set aside the arbitration award obtained in January 2017 by P&ID, a British Virgin Islands registered company, against Nigeria.
The
award was originally for about $6.6bn but had increased to about $11bn as of
the date of the court judgment because of interest. P&ID had brought the
claim against Nigeria before the arbitral tribunal, alleging that Nigeria
breached a gas supply and purchase agreement (GSPA) to supply gas to a P&ID
project that was to be located in Calabar, Cross River State.
Nigeria
successfully obtained leave of the High Court in London in September 2020 to
appeal against the arbitral tribunal award. Hearing on the appeal took place
for eight weeks between January and March this year. While Nigeria’s victory
has brought enormous relief to the country, it is crucial to understand the
basis for the judgment of the court and the lessons the country should learn
from the case.
Several
allegations of corruption were at the centre of Nigeria’s challenge to the
arbitration award.
Nigeria
alleged that P&ID paid bribes to several officials of the Nigerian
government involved in the entry into the GSPA between Nigeria and P&ID
between 2009 and 2010. Among the officials alleged to have been corrupted by
P&ID were the former Minister of Petroleum Resources, the late Alhaji
Rilwanu Lukman, a former NNPC official, the late Mr. Taofiq Tijani and a former
Director of Legal Services, the late Mrs.. Grace Taiga.
It
was also alleged that P&ID paid bribes to the first lead external counsel
for Nigeria during the arbitration proceedings, Mr Supo Shasore, SAN and
government lawyers that advised on the arbitration, including Mrs Kemi Adelore,
then Director of Legal Services in the Ministry of Petroleum Resources, and
Mr
Ikechukwu Oguine, then Coordinator, Legal Services of NNPC, and that these
lawyers colluded with P&ID to ‘throw’ the case.
Another
key allegation made by Nigeria was that P&ID told lies to the arbitral
tribunal to secure the award.
These
lies included claims that it had obtained the financing and completed the
engineering for the Calabar project when in fact, it had not done either. These
lies amounted to perjury and had deceived the tribunal into making the award in
P&ID’s favour.
P&ID
denied all the allegations and asserted that Nigeria lost the arbitration
proceedings because of incompetence on the part of its officials responsible.
Allegations
of Corruption
The
court upheld the allegations made regarding late Mrs. Taiga and found that some
payments she received from P&ID were indeed bribes. The payments continued
until 2020 when the arbitration was in progress, and the court held that
P&ID continued to make payments to Mrs Taiga to ensure she did not
reveal
the earlier payments made to her. Thus, the dealings between P&ID and Mrs
Taiga related not just to the entry into the GSPA, but also tainted the
arbitration proceedings.
This
was one of the main grounds on which the arbitration award was set aside.
The
court dismissed Nigeria’s allegations of corruption against the late Alhaji
Lukman for lack of evidence.
Also,
it dismissed the allegations against the lawyers who were involved in Nigeria’s
behalf in the arbitration. The court instead found that the lawyers had
represented Nigeria honestly and made concerted efforts to resolve the matter
in Nigeria’s interest. Concerning Mr Shasore SAN, the court highlighted several
steps he took to defend Nigeria.
It
noted that the people to blame for any failings in
Nigeria’s
defence were the senior officials of the Nigerian government who took no action
on several recommendations made to them by Mr Shasore on how best to defend the
case at the arbitral tribunal.
Perjury
The
court agreed with Nigeria that P&ID had lied to the arbitral tribunal about
how much progress it had made in obtaining financing and in performing the
engineering for the project. These lies, the court found, assisted P&ID in
securing the award.
A
P&ID witness, the late Mr Michael Quinn, had given a witness statement to
the arbitral tribunal
purporting
to set out how the GSPA had been entered into. The statement did not mention
the payments made by P&ID to the late Mrs Taiga. The court held that if the
arbitral tribunal had been aware of the said payments, its decision would
likely have been different. That concealment, in the court’s view, amounted also
to perjury. These examples of perjury on P&ID’s part constituted the second
major basis for the setting aside of the award.
Lessons
One
of the major lessons from the case is that the nation must ensure that
contracts entered into by government are prepared by competent and experienced
legal and other experts. The court was very critical of the GSPA and the
obligations that Nigeria assumed under the contract. While setting aside the
award, it noted that Nigeria had failed to provide the right resources for
entering into such a significant contract.
Another
obvious lesson is that senior government officials entrusted with
decision-making power must show a strong sense of responsibility and should be
held accountable where they do not. The tribunal identified several instances
where key recommendations concerning the arbitration were not acted upon by the
officials responsible, including Ministers of Justice and of Petroleum
Resources. The court has come to Nigeria’s rescue this time, but it is clear
from the judgment that if the heads of the relevant ministries had performed
their duties effectively, this case might not have arisen at all.
Jerry
Amao wrote in from Lagos
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