The Nigeria Data Protection Commission (NDPC) and Meta Platforms, Inc., on Friday, agreed to settle out of court over the dispute on the $32.8 million fine imposed against the latter by the regulatory agency.
Counsel for the parties told Justice James Omotosho of the Federal High Court in Abuja shortly after the matter was called for ruling.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Justice Omotosho had, on July 16, fixed today for ruling on NDPC’s preliminary objection against the suit filed by Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram.
The judge had also scheduled today for ruling on Meta’s request to amend its process.
The NDPC had, on Feb. 18, imposed both a remedial fee of 32,800,000 million US dollars and eight corrective orders against Meta Inc.
The American multinational technology company was alleged to have violated the fundamental privacy rights of its Nigerian users with respect to behavioural advertising on Facebook and Instagram.
Dissatisfied with the action, Meta Platforms Inc., in a motion ex-parte dated and filed on Feb. 26, dragged the regulatory agency to court as sole respondent.
In the motion ex-parte marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/355/2025 and moved by Fred Onuofia, SAN, on March 4, Justice Omotosho granted one of the two orders sought.
The judge had granted leave to Meta to commence proceedings by way of judicial-review seeking, inter alia, an order of certiorari quashing the compliance and enforcement orders dated Feb. 18 issued by NDPC against the company.
It urged the court to nullify “all other investigations, proceedings and actions taken by respondent against the applicant leading to the ‘Final Orders.’”
The judge, however, refused to grant Meta’s relief seeking a stay of the proceedings of all matters relating to the “Final Orders” issued by NDPC against it, pending the hearing and determination of the judicial review proceedings.
Instead, the judge made an order of accelerated hearing of the suit.
But NDPC, in a preliminary objection filed by its lawyer and the head, ALPHA & ROHI Law Firm, Adeola Adedipe, SAN, told the court that the suit was incompetent and the court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain same.
At the scheduled ruling, Meta’s lawyer, Onwuobia, begged the court to defer the ruling on NDPC’s preliminary objection and the motion on notice to amend their suit.