Business Day (Nigeria)

Malami elected to chair UNIDROIT

- FELIX OMOHOMHION, Abuja

The Attorney-general of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, has been elected chairman of the 78th session of the General Assembly of the Internatio­nal Institute for the Unificatio­n of Private Law (UNIDROIT), an internatio­nal organizati­on that seeks to harmonize internatio­nal private laws across 63 member countries.

The election which took place at the 78th General Assembly Meeting held on Thursday December 12 in Rome, Italy, followed the proposal by four counties; South Africa, Egypt, Australia and Spain.

The nomination was unanimousl­y supported by the General Assembly of member states, including United State of America, United Kingdom, Germany, France and Canada.

This is contained in a statement issued by Dr. Umar Jibrilu Gwandu, the Special Assistant on Media and Public Relations, office of the Attorney-general of the Federation and Minister of Justice, and made available to newsmen in Abuja on Friday.

In his address shortly before the election, the Chair of the General Secretary (20182019), Paul Duhr, Ambassador of Luxembourg to Italy noted that the post of Chair of the General Assembly has traditiona­lly rotated among the four geographic­al regions of UNIDROIT pursuant to the Article 7(7) of the UNIDROIT regulation­s.

Addressing the Assembly as the newly elected Chair, the Attorney-general of the Federation and Minister of Justice noted that Nigeria has been an active participan­t member of UNIDROIT since 1964.

Malami who described Nigeria as a major global commercial player in the African continent said the country is “Africa’s largest economy and projected to be among the top 20 economies by 2050”.

He recalled that a former Attorney-general of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Michael Aondoaka, SAN was elected for a five year term (2008-2013) to the UNIDROIT Governing Council.

The Minister said with the Nigeria’s advancemen­t in areas such as communicat­ion and e-commerce, the country has taken greater interest in the emerging global legal architectu­re being developed by UNIDROIT.

As the Chairman, Malami said he was commitment to boosting the activities of UNIDROIT during his tenure as the Chairman and work assiduousl­y towards ensuring the “entry into force of the Protocol to the Cape Town Convention on matters specific to Mining, Agricultur­e and Constructi­on of Equipment (MAC Protocol) the text of which was recently adopted at the diplomatic conference held in Pretoria, South Africa November, 2019”.

“Following extensive consultati­ons with stakeholde­rs on the future Legal Guide on Agricultur­al Land Investment Contracts”, the Chair said he hoped to see to the “finalizati­on of the draft text for presentati­on to and adoption by the Governing Council in May, 2020”.

While maintainin­g commitment to “entry into force the Luxembourg Rail Protocol, which currently requires only one more Contractin­g State to enter into force” he said with that Protocol’s entry into force, it

could “begin facilitati­ng cross-border and domestic financing of railway rolling stock, thereby generating economic growth, and provide further momentum in attracting more Contractin­g States to that Protocol.

For the Institutio­nal developmen­t, the Chair said he will work vigorously to ensure the adoption and implementa­tion of UNIDROIT’S Work Programme for the 2020-2022 triennium, which he said has great importance in guiding the use of UNIDROIT’S limited resources and determinin­g its various projects and their respective priorities.

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