Centre Applauds Nigeria’s $6.2m Arbitration Victory Over UK’s Firm

The president of Africa Development Studies Centre (ADSC), Victor Oluwafemi, has applauded the President Bola Tinubu-led Federal Government over the country’s landmark arbitration victory of $6.2m against European Dynamics UK Ltd. Nigeria had emerged victorious in an international arbitration dispute involving European technology contractor European Dynamics UK Ltd, saving the country from a potential financial […]

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The president of Africa Development Studies Centre (ADSC), Victor Oluwafemi, has applauded the President Bola Tinubu-led Federal Government over the country’s landmark arbitration victory of $6.2m against European Dynamics UK Ltd.

Nigeria had emerged victorious in an international arbitration dispute involving European technology contractor European Dynamics UK Ltd, saving the country from a potential financial exposure of over $6.2 million (approximately ₦9.3 billion).

The dispute which arose from a national e-Procurement project managed by the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), ended with the tribunal dismissing the contractor’s claims in their entirety.

Oluwafemi attributed the feat to efforts of the BPP Direct General,
Dr Adebowale Adedokun and the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Lateef Fagbemi SAN.

The ADSC President in a statement said the decisive outcome is not merely a legal win but a governance statement at a time when international contractors often assume that African institutions will capitulate under technical pressure but Nigeria demonstrated maturity, institutional discipline and contractual courage.

“The dismissal of claims totalling over 6.2 million dollars signals a structural shift in how the country manages public-sector technology contracts. This is a defining moment in Nigeria’s procurement evolution, Oluwafemi asserted.

“For years, procurement in many developing economies has been vulnerable to inflated milestone claims, loosely defined deliverables and weak enforcement of performance validation mechanisms.

“The tribunal’s affirmation of the centrality of User Acceptance Testing reinforces a fundamental principle: value must be delivered before value is paid for. That principle must now become doctrine.

“The Bureau of Public Procurement has sent a powerful message to the global contracting community that Nigeria will no longer accept distorted contractual interpretations, premature payment claims or technical shortcuts disguised as compliance. Payment must follow performance.

“Performance must be verifiable. Verification must be independent and rigorous. This is how institutions are built. The courage shown by Dr Adedokun in resisting premature settlement discussions reflects leadership rooted in fiduciary responsibility rather than convenience.

“The strategic coordination between the Bureau, the Attorney General’s office and Nigerian legal experts further demonstrates that domestic professional capacity can compete and prevail on the international stage.

“This victory should now catalyse a broader reform journey.
Nigeria must seize this moment to institutionalise a new procurement architecture anchored on mandatory performance validated digital milestones; strengthened e-procurement oversight frameworks; independent technical audit layers embedded into contract execution…

“Through frameworks such as Policy as a Platform and Results as a Service, Nigeria can move beyond reactive dispute resolution into proactive procurement intelligence. The future of public procurement must be data-driven, performance-coded, and legally fortified,” he added.

End.

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