THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) – The Dutch Supreme Court on Friday rejected a final appeal by Russia against a $50 billion arbitration award to former shareholders of Russian oil giant Yukos, who claimed Moscow deliberately bankrupted the company more than 20 years ago.
Dutch Supreme Court rejects Russia’s final appeal in $50B Yukos case
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) – The Dutch Supreme Court on Friday rejected a final appeal by Russia against a $50 billion arbitration award to former shareholders of Russian oil giant Yukos, who claimed Moscow deliberately bankrupted the company more than 20 years ago.
The Netherlands’ highest court said the decision marked “a definitive end” to the yearslong legal battle over the arbitration award to former Yukos shareholders, who have long argued that the Kremlin took down the oil company to silence its CEO, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, a fierce critic of President Vladimir Putin.
Friday’s ruling upheld a decision last year by judges in Amsterdam to reject Russia’s final legal argument in litigation stemming from a 2014 ruling by a panel of international arbitrators that Moscow seized control of Yukos in 2003 by deliberately crippling the company with huge tax claims.
The state launched “a full assault on Yukos and its beneficial owners in order to bankrupt Yukos and appropriate its assets while, at the same time, removing Mr. Khodorkovsky from the political arena,” the arbitrators, who deliberated in The Hague, said in 2014.