The Federal Government on Thursday denied the allegation that it did not diligently defend the case leading to the award of $9.6bn damages against Nigeria over a botched gas contract.
Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, stated the government position when he appeared as guest on the NTA programme, Good Morning Nigeria, monitored by the News Agency of Nigeria in Abuja.
He said the insinuation in certain quarters that the government did not defend the case both at arbitration and court stages was “untrue and unfair.”
A UK court had, in a ruling, authorised an Irish engineering and project management company, Process and Industrial Developments Ltd (P&ID) to seize $9.6bn in Nigerian assets over the failed contract.
The court judgment was the fallout of the contract purportedly entered into in 2010 between the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources and P&ID; and the subsequent award was made in July 2015 by an arbitration panel sitting in London in favour of the company.
“It is not true that we did not defend it or that we were not represented,’’ Mohammed said.
He said the government successfully applied to have the award set aside by the Federal High Court in Lagos, but the Tribunal ignored this decision.
“The contract was entered into in 2010 and from the records made available, there were three arbitrators.
“The arbitrators were the parties to be nominated by the company, the other by the Ministry of Petroleum Resources while the two of them will agree on the third arbiter.
“Nigeria was represented on the arbitration by the former Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Bayo Ojo (SAN).’’
The minister said that after the award in July 2015 by the arbitration panel sitting in London, the government went into negotiations with the company, but all to no avail.
Mohammed said that when the company also filed the case for the enforcement order in both the UK and the U.S. courts simultaneously, the government engaged services of solicitors to defend the action.
“We succeeded to some extent in the U.S. court and our lawyers are still there trying to defend the action.
“It is quite disturbing the way Nigerians are commenting about this issue.
“It is about all of us because 9.6 billion dollars translates to about N3.5 trillion and that is 20 per cent of foreign reserves.
“Imagine what is going to happen when 9.6 billion dollars of our assets are attached.
“It is going to affect every Nigerian, and that is why we are appealing for patriotism and objectivity of the media in handling this delicate matter,’’ he said.
The minister reiterated that the award was unprecedented, unjustifiable and an attempt to inflict economy injury on Nigeria and its people.
He, however, reassured Nigerians that there was no imminent threat to Nigeria’s assets in spite of the award, stressing that the government would do all things, diplomatic and legal to upturn the decision.