Nigeria defends Okonjo-Iweala’s WTO nomination

Nigeria defends Okonjo-Iweala’s WTO nomination

Nigeria has rejected the conclusions reached by the African Union’s office of legal counsel on the nomination of Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to contest for th

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Nigeria has rejected the conclusions reached by the African Union’s office of legal counsel on the nomination of Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to contest for the office of the director-general of the World Trade Organisation, WTO, TheCable is reporting.

In a letter addressed to members of the ministerial committee on candidature and four organs of the African Union including the bureau of the chairperson and office of legal counsel, the Nigerian embassy and permanent mission to the African Union (AU) said claims that Okonjo-Iweala’s nomination contravenes laid down rules are unguarded and failed all parameters of objectivity and unbiased submission.

The AU’s office of legal counsel, had on Thursday, argued that her nomination came after the November 30 deadline set by the ministerial committee on candidature for member countries to present their candidates. This, it said, was to allow member states to endorse a consensus candidate at the February 2020 ordinary session. However, an agreement could not be reached on the consensus candidate.

The Nigerian government, in its letter, said Okonjo-Iweala’s nomination did not violate any laws as it was a replacement of a previously presented candidate (Yonov Agah) and not a fresh nomination. It said the rules referred to by the legal counsel were related to the submission of a new candidature and “not, by any shred of imagination, a substitution/replacement of an earlier submission duly made in line with all rules”.

“Hence, Nigeria’s substitution/replacement of Ambassador Yonov Frederick Agah with Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as a candidate for DG-WTO cannot be treated as a fresh nomination for the position, and as such cannot be said, or even imagined not to conform with any of the rules of procedure deliberately highlighted by OLC to mislead.”

It also said none of the decisions so far prevents any member state from substituting its candidate especially when a consensus candidate has not been chosen.
“To state that Nigeria is latching on its sovereign right to change existing rules of procedure and relevant decisions of the executive council as well as decisions of other policy organs, is very unbecoming, unfortunate and a gross misinterpretation and misrepresentation of facts from an office established to be dispassionate, neutral and professional

“OLC has substantially failed to substantiate how the Federal Republic of Nigeria, in exercising her sovereign right, flouted any of the said decisions or rules of procedure, as none of them categorically precludes the substitution of a candidate by the member-states.”