Court Quashes Case By Former Employee Of ECOWAS Commission

By Adadareporters

The ECOWAS Court has dismissed a case instituted by Mrs Dorothy Etim, former employee of the ECOWAS Commission, because she filed her case beyond the time limit.

Etim filed suit ECW/CCJ/APP/44/21, alleging that the ECOWAS Commission and its president wrongfully dismissed her on 8 September 2015.

According to her, the incident was based on an allegation that she produced forged documents to access ECOWAS education grant for the benefit of her four children.

She told the court that she was not given fair hearing, adding that she wrote several letters on the matter but did not receive any response.

She then asked the court to declare her dismissal wrongful. She also prayed the court to order the respondents to pay her accrued salaries and entitlements and the sum of 300,000,000 naira as exemplary damages.

In its response, the ECOWAS Commission asked the court to dismiss the case as Article 9(3) of the 2005 Supplementary Protocol provides that action by or against a community institution or any member of the community are statute-barred after three years from the date when the right of action arose.

The commission also contended that Mrs Etim did not follow internal processes, specifically, she did not appeal to the head of the institution during the mandatory time, and did not appeal to the Council of Minister. The respondent, therefore, asked the court to dismiss all her claims.

In the judgment the court noted that under Article 9(3) of the Protocol of the Court (as amended), claims by or against a community institution or its staff are statute-barred after three years. Consequently, the court held that since the incident occurred in 2015 and the claim filed in 2021, the claim was submitted well beyond the statutory time limit and therefore inadmissible.

The judgment, delivered by Justice Sengu Mohamed Koroma, also dismissed the applicant’s claims of human rights violations against the ECOWAS Commission, emphasising that only Member States, not community institutions, are recognised as parties in such matters.

Furthermore, the court dismissed the case against the president of the commission stating that “it would be duplicitous to sue both the President and the Commission.”

The ECOWAS Court is the Community Institution empowered to entertain administrative conflicts between Community institutions and their employees.

Also on the panel were Justices Dupe Atoki and Ricardo Cláudio Monteiro Gonçalves.

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