Daily Trust

LAW Challenges ahead ECOWAS court’s arbitral jurisdicti­on

- By Clement A. Oloyede

The Community Court of Justice (CCJ) of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has indicated its readiness to extend its jurisdicti­on towards arbitratio­n as already provided for under Article 9(5) of its Protocol.

The President of the Court, Justice Jerome Traore said this in his speech during the opening ceremony of the 2017/2018 legal year of the court, adding that the court’s arbitral powers play the role of five internatio­nal courts.

He said the court has powers which enables it to be described variously as a classical internatio­nal court mandated to settle inter-state disputes, or as a community court of integratio­n, or as the administra­tive court of an internatio­nal organisati­on or the human rights court of the sub-region.

However, the keynote speaker, Professor Gaston Kenfack Douajni, a former president of the United Nations Commission on Internatio­nal Trade Law (UNCITRAL), while speaking on the theme of the new legal year, “Current Trends in Internatio­nal and Regional Arbitratio­n”, said implementi­ng CCJ’s arbitratio­n agreements will be “virtually impossible, especially as the court’s arbitratio­n system can only be institutio­nal arbitratio­n.”

He defined arbitratio­n as consisting of “settlement of disputes, including commercial disputes, mainly by private persons, where the arbitrator­s are appointed on the basis of an arbitratio­n agreement in the form of an arbitratio­n clause or a compromise agreement.”

He said in view of this definition, it is difficult to implement the provisions in Article 9(5) of the 2005 Supplement­ary Protocol on CCJ that provided that “Pending the establishm­ent of the Arbitratio­n Tribunal provided for under Article 16 of the Treaty, the court shall have power to act as arbitrator for the purpose of Article 16 of the Treaty.”

Article 16 (1) provides that, “there is hereby establishe­d an Arbitratio­n Tribunal of the Community, and (2) the status, compositio­n, powers, procedure and other issues concerning the Arbitratio­n Tribunal shall be as set out in a protocol relating thereto.”

Douajni said what this means is that for the court to act as an arbitral tribunal, the parties must, under an arbitratio­n clause or an arbitratio­n agreement, seize it for that purpose.

He however cautioned that even if the court had been asked to act as an arbitral tribunal, it should be aware of the law applicable to the arbitral proceeding­s and the law applicable to the substance of the dispute before it.

“These details are not available today, especially since the protocol on the court’s arbitratio­n system, as provided for under Article 16(2) of the ECOWAS Treaty has not yet been adopted. Perhaps it has not yet been drafted.

He suggested that the Arbitratio­n Protocol relating to arbitral powers of the CCJ should clearly define the arbitratio­n agreement and pay special attention to the rules relating to the constituti­on of the arbitral tribunal as well as those relating to the arbitratio­n independen­ce and impartiali­ty of the arbitrator.

He added that the protocol should also include provisions to enable the control of the period and cost of arbitratio­n of the disputes submitted before the CCJ.

To this end, Prof. Douajni suggested that the CCJ, in carrying out its jurisdicti­onal function on arbitratio­n can only intervene at the level of control over the arbitral awards concerning the pronouncem­ents made in this regard. He said this can be done by examining the legality of the said awards, during the proceeding­s seeking their annulment, as may be filed thereafter.

Legal experts and other stakeholde­rs in the justice system have all at one time or the other advocated proper utilisatio­n of alternativ­e dispute resolution mechanisms which include arbitratio­n and mediation to decongest cases before courts.

Further suggestion­s on what the court should do

The Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN) in his goodwill message acknowledg­ed that the existence of a credible alternativ­e means of dispute resolution is key to foreign investment decisions and also a catalyst for commercial growth.

“It is indeed a novel idea and most welcome developmen­t that the CCJ is seeking to promote alternativ­e dispute resolution which is for the benefit of the entire ECOWAS community,” he said.

Represente­d by the Solicitor-General of the Federation, Dayo Apata, the AGF advised the CCJ to partner with the Regional Centre for Internatio­nal Commercial Arbitratio­n, Lagos while working on the establishm­ent of the CCJ Arbitratio­n Tribunal.

He also reassured the court of the continued support and cooperatio­n of Nigeria while urging the judges “to continue to exercise the court’s jurisdicti­on with all fairness and dedication so as to deepen law and order within the community.”

On his part, the Speaker of ECOWAS Parliament, Mousapha Cisse Lo urged for solid guidelines and dispute resolution mechanism for internatio­nal contracts and investment­s. He said the presence of these will make the region more attractive for internatio­nal trade and developmen­t.

Lo, who was represente­d by the Chairman of the Parliament’s Committee on Administra­tion, Finance, Budget Control and Audit, Senator Mohammed Shaaba Lafiagi, said the CCJ should collaborat­e with Organisati­on for the Harmonizat­ion of Business Law in Africa (OHADA) on the harmonizat­ion of business laws.

“In this growing area of internatio­nal commercial arbitratio­n, collaborat­ion between the ECOWAS Community Court of Justice with the Ohada Court of Justice and Arbitratio­n will be a welcome developmen­t,” he said.

Court wants respect for its decisions

Justice Traore went further to say with all these heavy responsibi­lities, it is saddening that the court is constitute­d by only seven judges for the entire 15-member states. He said the court should not be “suffocated at the time when it is making serious efforts to institute the principle of a two-tier system of operation, notably by the inclusion of an appellate chamber.

“No economic reason will be sufficient enough to justify a dismantlin­g of the court, which, I recall, symbolizes at the highest level, the concern for sobriety in the utilizatio­n of public resources,” he said.

He said to take steps backwards also implies disregardi­ng the decisions made by the court, “and thus leaving the poor victims to their fate. So, a court decision has value only when it is implemente­d.”

“To talk of judicial efficiency is to talk of enforcemen­t of court decisions in the best possible time and in good faith,” Justice Traore said.

He called on all ECOWAS member states and sister institutio­ns to think deeply about the CCJ and “take steps towards institutin­g appropriat­e reforms so as to place the legal organ of the community along the lines of the best practices of internatio­nal courts.”

 ??  ?? The President of ECOWAS court, Justice Jerome Traore (right) and other judges of the court at the 2017-2018 Legal Year ceremony in Abuja recently
The President of ECOWAS court, Justice Jerome Traore (right) and other judges of the court at the 2017-2018 Legal Year ceremony in Abuja recently

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