The federal government has agreed to pay $496 million to settle a multibillion-dollar claim by Global Steel Holdings Limited over the control of Ajaokuta Steel Company.
In lieu of the $5.258 billion the corporation requested, according to Attorney-General Abubakar Malami, the federal government will pay the company $496 million to resolve the dispute. According to a statement from Mr Malami’s spokesperson, Umar Gwandu, the agreement was achieved inside the International Chamber of Commerce’s alternative dispute settlement framework.
PremiumTimes reports that the dispute followed the federal government’s revocation in 2008 of an agreement that handed control of the steelworks and the National Iron Ore Mining Company to Global Steel Holdings Limited, an Indian firm. In canceling the deal, the Umar Yarádua administration said the terms of the concession at the time were not favourable to the country.
The government said, five contracts signed between 1999 and 2007 that gave one firm group, Global Steel group, total control over the Nigerian steel market were the origin of the problems.
According to the justice ministry, a new administration in 2008 decided to terminate the contracts defying legal counsel from the Federal Ministry of Justice, which noted the termination cost in the form of damages.
If the government had waited 55 days, the agreement would have been formally canceled and the government would have been able to recoup more than $26 million from Global Steel, the report says.
“This was because the firm appeared unable to pay the first tranche for the Ajaokuta shares before the first anniversary of the agreement (25 May 2008),” the statement reads.
“Global steel, in consequence, took the federal government to the International Chamber of Commerce, International Court of Arbitration, Paris, commencing arbitration in 2008. Although the Federal Government negotiated a settlement in May 2013, the previous administration failed to implement its settlement agreement,” the statement says.
Global Steel issued an anticipated claim in damages of around $10–14 billion against Nigeria in May 2020 and threatened to restart the arbitration.
The government said it agreed to pay over $400 million to settle the case once and for all after engaging PwCNigeria to do a comprehensive review to ensure taxpayers are protected.
With this development, the statement notes that President Muhammadu Buhari has now “rescued the steel industry from interminable and complex disputes as well as saving the taxpayer from humongous damages.”
Source: radionigeria