The recent Premium Pension arbitration may come to be remembered not merely as a boardroom dispute, but as a moment when Nigeria’s private governance architecture was forced to confront a question it has long preferred to treat as ceremonial: can institutions entrusted with public wealth be governed by people whose political proximity creates a continuing integrity risk?
On the surface, the matter appears narrow. A tribunal reportedly ordered the removal of four directors of Premium Pension Limited after holding that they qualified as politically exposed persons and that their nomination and continued service contravened the company’s shareholders’ agreement. But the significance lies in the reasoning. By drawing on Nigeria’s Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act 2022, FATF guidance, international AML standards and global banking practice, the tribunal appears to have moved the concept of the politically exposed person from compliance paperwork into the heart of corporate governance.
That is potentially
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