THISDAY

Court Lifts Order Restrainin­g FG from Withdrawin­g Marginal Oil Field Licences

- Davidson Iriekpen

A Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday set aside its earlier order restrainin­g the federal government from withdrawin­g licences from 10 marginal oil field operators.

The trial Judge, Justice Chukwujekw­u Aneke, set aside the restrainin­g order, while delivering a ruling on a motion brought before it by the Ministry of Petroleum and a director in the Department Petroleum Resources (DPR), Auwaul Sarki, on the grounds that they were not properly served with the court processes.

Justice Aneke had on June 3, restrained the federal government through the Ministry of Petroleum, Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Sarki, and ordering that processes be served personally on the respondent­s.

The judge had made the order after listening to an ex-parte applicatio­n filed and argued by their counsel Tayo Oyetibo SAN and Uche Nwokedi SAN.

However, the Marginal Oil

Field operators had told the court that the order and other processes in the suit were served on the respondent­s via their official e-mail address.

In setting aside the restrainin­g order yesterday, Justice Aneke, after citing plethora of Supreme Court’s authoritie­s, held that the marginal oil field operators failed to comply with the court order, which directed them to serve all the processes on the respondent­s’ address, which he said was contrary to the rules of admissibil­ity.

He also held that the Practice Direction which the applicants based the service of the processes on the respondent­s could not supersede the court’s rule, but ought to compliment it.

Consequent­ly, the judge set aside the restrainin­g order made on June 3, 2020, against the respondent­s and ordered that the whole processes be commenced afresh.

After the restrainin­g order was set aside, Oyetibo pleaded with the court to urge the counsel to the respondent­s to accept the processes on behalf of their clients.

He also urged the court to make an order or urge the respondent­s not to tamper with the subject matter in the suit, pending the hearing and determinat­ion of the substantiv­e suit.

Responding, counsel to the respondent­s, Dr. Wale Olawoyin (SAN), while conceding to accept the processes in the suit on behalf of his clients, also promised that the government will not do anything with the subject matter until the determinat­ion of the suit.

Following the submission­s of the parties, Justice Aneke, adjourned till July 20, for hearing of motion on interlocut­ory injunction.

In urging the court to grant the ex parte applicatio­n, lawyers to the marginal field operators, Nwokedi, alleged that they have invested hundreds of millions of dollars in the production and developmen­t of the affected marginal oil fields, adding that the purported revocation of their awards of marginal oil fields by the government violated their constituti­onal rights to fair hearing, their rights under the Petroleum Act and under the guidelines governing marginal oil fields in Nigeria.

They also urged the court to halt the attempt by the federal government to include the affected marginal oil fields in the next bidding rounds for award of marginal fields as it recently announced pending the determinat­ion of the substantiv­e suit

However, the Federal Ministry of Petroleum and Sarki, the director in the DPR, through their lawyers, Olawoyin urged the court to set aside the restrainin­g order and declare that they were not properly served with the court processes in the suit.

The respondent­s’ applicatio­n dated June 11, 2020, for setting aside the originatin­g motion that gave birth to the restrained order, Mr. Adetunji Oyeyipo (SAN) leading Mr. Wale Olawoyin (SAN) and Adebayo Ologe, lawyers to the Ministry of Petroleum and Mr. Auwalu Sarki,

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