Sunday, July 5, 2015

US Court Issues Papers to Russia Over Yukos Affair. If successful, bank accounts and property belonging to the Russian government in the US could be seized


Published in Oil Industry News on Sunday, 5 July 2015

Graphic for US Court Issues Papers to Russia Over Yukos Affair in Oil and Gas News
If successful, bank accounts and property belonging to the Russian government in America could be seized.

Russian government property in the United States could be seized after former shareholders of the Yukos oil company sought recognition of a multi-billion dollar compensation award in US courts.

Former shareholders in Mikhail Khodorkovsky’s defunct oil company are seeking recognition in the US of a $50bn award of damages from the Russian government, issued by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague last year.

If successful, the case could oblige US authorities to freeze Russian government-owned assets, including bank accounts and real estate.

Court papers were handed over by the US embassy in Moscow on June 22, Russia’s RBK newspaper reported. Russia is believed to have 60 days, or until August 20, to submit a response.

Dmitry Peskov, Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, declined to comment on the case, saying it was “a matter for lawyers”.

• Russia 'forced to pay $50bn' to Yukos shareholders
• Fifteen years of Vladimir Putin: in quotes
• Mikhail Khodorkovsky pleads not guilty in repeat Yukos trial

A spokesman for the United States embassy in Moscow confirmed that the State Department acts as a go between when US courts issue papers to foreign states, but declined to comment on the particular case.

Yukos was once Russia’s largest oil company, but was dismantled after Mr Khodorkovsky was jailed on charges of tax evasion, embezzlement, and theft in 2005.

Many of its assets were later acquired by Russian state-owned companies including Rosneft, an oil firm headed by Igor Sechin, who is a close ally of Vladimir Putin.

In a case which Kremlin critics said offered a stark example of Mr Putin's increasingly autocratic rule, Mr Khodorkovsky's arrest was justified by the Russian leader who claimed: "A thief must be in jail."

Mr Putin pardoned Khodorkovsky in December 2013 after he had spent 10 years in prison. Mr Khodorkovsky is no longer a shareholder in Yukos.

The Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague ruled in July last year that Russia had deliberately forced the company into bankruptcy with excessive tax claims in order to appropriate its assets, and awarded the plaintiffs - who do not include Mr Khodorkovsky - $50bn in compensation.

Last month authorities in France and Belgium seized several Russian state-owned assets, including real estate and bank accounts, in connection with the case.

The Russian Foreign Ministry summoned the Belgian ambassador over the incident, which it described as "an openly hostile act," and threatened to take “reciprocal measures targeting Belgian assets in Russia.”

The Belgian foreign ministry said at the time that the seizures had been served by bailiffs without the involvement of the Belgian government.

Austrian authorities also announced an asset freeze, but did not provide details.
Russia has previously said it does not recognise the Hague court ruling and has no intention of paying the compensation.
Source: www.worldoil.com