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UK court rejects Russia's appeal over $60 billion lawsuit with former Yukos investors

A London court ruled that Russia could not claim immunity as a way to avoid paying $60 billion in arbitration awards for its seizure and sale of the defunct oil company Yukos.

Over the past decade, three former Yukos shareholders (Hulley Enterprises Yukos Universal and Veteran Oil) have tried to enforce the award of 2014 with little success.

The arbitration tribunal at The Hague awarded the companies just over $50 billion in 2014. The arbitral tribunal found that Russia had carried out an "expropriation devious and calculated" of Yukos following the imprisonment of its former owner Mikhail Khodorkovsky.

Since then, they have tried to enforce the award in Britain, America and the Netherlands, where the interest has increased to almost $60 billion.

A court dismissed a case last year

The latest appeal from Russia, even though the decision is

Under appeal

In the London phase of the legal fight, Russia argued that it had not agreed to submit to arbitration's jurisdiction, an argument that was rejected.

Reject in November 2023

The Court of Appeal rejected Russia's appeal of that decision on Tuesday, but it will take several years of legal battles to get any money.

Tim Osborne said that the GML shareholder group, which held the majority of Yukos shares through its subsidiaries in the past, was closing in on the moment where (President Vladimir Putin's) Russia would have to pay for all its illegal acts.

The Russian Embassy in London didn't immediately respond to our request for comment.

Yukos was seized in 2006 by the state after the oil tycoon Khodorkovsky had a falling out with Putin. The government demanded billions in back taxes.

Khodorkovsky, the billionaire exile who was convicted for tax fraud and evasion, which he denied, spent ten years in prison. He now lives in London. He is not involved in the case. (Reporting and editing by Sachin Ravikumar; Sam Tobin)

(source: Reuters)