As a “gesture of goodwill” to allow for discussions, a Chinese corporation at the centre of a legal dispute with Nigeria released a government-owned jet that had been seized on its behalf by a French court, the company said on Friday.
The Nigerian presidential Airbus A330 was repossessed, but Zhongshan Fucheng Industrial Investment Co. Ltd. claimed in a statement that it had done so to demonstrate that it had “consistently sought to act reasonably and fairly in the course of a legal dispute” that was not of its making.
The dispute arose from a 2007 agreement between Zhongshan and the southwest state of Ogun, Nigeria, to establish a free trade zone. The agreement was terminated in 2015 because, in the eyes of the Nigerian government, the company had only built a perimeter fence on the land designated for the free trade zone.
“Zhongshan remains committed to talks with representatives of the Federal Government of Nigeria, this time serious and substantive on both sides, to reach a reasonable compromise settlement rapidly,” the company said in a statement.
A request for the response was not immediately answered by the Nigerian government.
A French court granted Zhongshan two orders in March and August to take assets in Nigeria after an arbitration verdict exceeding $60 million.
The Nigerian government charged Zhongshan on Thursday with launching an effort to confiscate its foreign assets, including presidential aeroplanes that were being maintained in France, as a result of the disagreement.