ECOWAS Court Declares Itself Incompetent in Contract Dispute Between INTERPUB and Republic of Guinea

Lagos, 15 May 2025: The ECOWAS Court of Justice has delivered its ruling in the case Agence Conseil en Communication et Évènementiel (INTERPUB) v. Republic of Guinea (Application No. ECW/CCJ/APP/04/25), declaring itself incompetent to hear the matter due to its contractual nature.

Case Background

The Applicant, INTERPUB, a communication and event management agency based in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, filed a suit against the Republic of Guinea for alleged breach of contract concerning the organization of the 9th edition of the Salon International du Textile Africain (SITA) in 2023. According to INTERPUB, the event was initiated following an official request and approval from Guinea’s Prime Minister, including its integration into the national budget.

INTERPUB claimed that it incurred significant expenses during the planning phase and signed a partnership agreement with the Guinean government, which granted the State financial oversight of the event and fixed INTERPUB’s fee at 10% of the project budget, with payment due by 11 December 2023. Despite multiple payment reminders and attempts at diplomatic mediation, Guinea allegedly failed to honor its commitments, leading INTERPUB to seek judicial redress from the ECOWAS Court.

The Applicant sought the recognition of the contractual agreement, an order compelling the State to pay over 104 million FCFA in fees, 72 million FCFA in damages, and a daily penalty of 1 million FCFA for delays.

Respondent’s Objection

The Republic of Guinea challenged the Court’s jurisdiction, arguing that the matter was purely contractual in nature and thus outside the scope of the Court’s mandate as defined by Article 9 of the 2005 Supplementary Protocol. Guinea requested that the Court declare the claims inadmissible and award costs against the Applicant.

Court’s Findings

The Court examined whether it had jurisdiction over the matter under Article 9 of the Supplementary Protocol A/SP.1/01/05, which limits the Court’s competence to:

  • Interpretation and application of ECOWAS legal instruments.
  • Human rights violations ;
  • Community staff disputes ;
  • Non-contractual liability of ECOWAS institutions; and
  • Arbitration matters by special agreement.

It found that the dispute arose strictly from a contractual agreement between a Member State and a private entity, with no allegations of human rights violations or involvement of ECOWAS institutions. Citing previous case law, including Chief Frank C. Ukor v. Rachad Laleye & Republic of Benin (2007), the Court reiterated that it lacks jurisdiction over purely civil or commercial contractual disputes not tied to a violation of human rights.

Court Decision

  • The Court admitted the written submissions filed by the Republic of Guinea.
  • It upheld the preliminary objection of lack of jurisdiction.
  • The Court consequently declared itself incompetent to adjudicate the claims brought by INTERPUB.
  • The Applicant was ordered to bear the legal costs.

Judicial Panel

The judgment was rendered by a panel comprising:

  • Hon. Justice Ricardo Cláudio Monteiro Gonçalves (Presiding Judge and judge Rapporteur)
  • Hon. Justice Sengu Mohamed Koroma (Member)
  • Hon. Justice Dupe Atoki(Member)