OOPS, AZALINA! WHAT’S THIS??! – AFTER ALL THE BOASTING & TRUMPETING, SULU HEIRS SEIZE AGAIN PETRONAS’S LUXEMBOURG UNITS IN RM66 BIL ARBITRATION DISPUTE

KUALA LUMPUR, 27 Mac 2018 - Menteri di Jabatan Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Azalina Othman Said ketika taklimat media mengenai Rang Undang-Undang AntiBerita Tidak Benar di Bangunan Parlimen di sini hari ini.?Gambar FAUZI BAHARUDIN Pemberita Team Parlimen

Petronas’ Luxembourg units seized again in RM66bil arbitration dispute

Malaysia stopped payments to descendants of the Sulu sultan after the 2013 Lahad Datu incursion saw 50 people killed. 

KUALA LUMPUR: Luxembourg court bailiffs issued fresh seizure orders for two units of Malaysian state oil firm Petronas this week, following a bid by descendants of a former sultanate to enforce a RM66 billion (US$15 billion) award they had won against Malaysia, according to the heirs’ lawyer and court documents seen by Reuters.

The Filipino heirs of the last Sultan of Sulu are seeking to enforce a RM87.6 billion (US$14.9 billion) award granted to them by a French arbitration court last year, amid a long-running dispute with the Malaysian government over a colonial-era land deal.

Malaysia, which did not participate in the arbitration, maintains the process is illegal. It obtained a stay on the award in France but the ruling remains enforceable overseas under a United Nations treaty on arbitration.

Petronas has said it will contest any claims made on its assets and Malaysia has vowed to use all legal measures to prevent its assets, including state-linked companies, from being seized overseas.

Cohen, of British law firm 4-5 Gray’s Inn Square, told Reuters the Luxembourg district court had indeed lifted the first seizure order on a minor issue that has since been addressed, but had not made a judgment on the merits of the arbitration.

“There was a technical ruling that has now been effectively dealt with, and the freezing orders are once more in place on the Petronas assets in Luxembourg,” he said via email.

The Luxembourg court could not be immediately reached for comment. Petronas and Malaysia’s law minister did not respond to requests for comment.

The dispute stems from a deal signed in 1878 between two European colonists and the Sultan of Sulu for use of his territory in present-day Malaysia – an agreement that independent Malaysia honoured until 2013, paying the monarch’s descendants a token sum annually.

Kuala Lumpur stopped the payments after a bloody incursion by supporters of the former sultanate who wanted to reclaim land from Malaysia. The heirs say they were not involved in the incursion and sought arbitration over the suspension of payments.

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