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5 Nov, 2021 09:59

Dutch Supreme Court backs Russia over Yukos oligarchs in $57 billion arbitration case

Dutch Supreme Court backs Russia over Yukos oligarchs in $57 billion arbitration case

The Dutch Supreme Court has overturned a 2014 ruling by a Hague-based arbitration tribunal that ordered Russia to pay $57 billion to former shareholders of Yukos, a defunct oil giant once owned by ex-oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky.

“Today the Supreme Court quashed the Appeal Court’s final judgement, as well as the court’s preceding judgement,” the Supreme Court said in a statement on Friday, noting that the case would be referred to the Amsterdam Court of Appeal for “renewed judgement.”

The judges contended that Russia had acceptable grounds for appealing the 2014 ruling, and ordered the Appeals Court to reconsider the claim that the former shareholders had committed fraud.

Also on rt.com Weaponized courts: The $50 bn Yukos case may be the final straw for Russia, ending its cooperation with Western ‘justice’

The court noted that Russia’s other objections to the 2014 ruling had been rejected.

In a statement, it claimed that, among other things, Russia’s primary objection concerned the way in which the Appeals Court had dealt with Moscow’s argument that the shareholders had allegedly committed fraud during the arbitration procedure. 

The ruling comes after seven years of legal wrangling following the verdict of the arbitration tribunal in 2014, which ruled that Moscow had violated its international obligations in having taken steps to bankrupt the massive oil company in the early 2000s.

Also on rt.com Russia set for showdown with international law amid $57bn Yukos oil empire battle & ruling over jailed opposition figure Navalny

Among the claimants is former oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who was arrested in 2003 on charges on fraud. Once Russia’s richest man, Khodorkovsky was charged and imprisoned until 2013. The London-based businessman had snapped up former Soviet assets for knockdown prices in the 1990s, creating an oil and gas behemoth. Khodorkovsky claimed his arrest was politically motivated – an assessment widely accepted by the Western media.

The former shareholders have said they remain “confident” of winning their case against Moscow after Friday’s ruling. “We will study the Supreme Court ruling, but are confident that the Court of Appeal in Amsterdam will dismiss the baseless allegations raised by the Russian Federation, and the arbitral awards will be upheld,” they said in a statement sent to Reuters.

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