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Cairn to target more state-owned firms to recover money due from Indian government

The company will bring lawsuits in several countries to make state-owned firms liable to pay the $1.2-billion plus interest and penalties that are due from the Indian government

PTI New Delhi Published 28.06.21, 01:55 AM
Representational image.

Representational image. Shutterstock

After Air India, Britain’s Cairn Energy plc plans to target assets of more state-owned firms and banks in countries from the US to Singapore as it looks to ramp up efforts to recover the amount due from the Indian government after winning an arbitration against the levy of retrospective taxes.

A lawyer representing the company said Cairn will bring lawsuits in several countries to make state-owned firms liable to pay the $1.2-billion plus interest and penalties that are due from the Indian government.

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Last month, Cairn brought a lawsuit in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York pleading that Air India is controlled by the Indian government so much that they are “alter egos” and the airline should be held liable for the arbitration award.

“There are a number of state enterprises which we are considering for enforcement action. Enforcement action will be soon and it may not be in the US,” Dennis Hranitzky, head of the sovereign litigation practice at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, a law firm representing the company, told PTI.

A three-member international arbitration tribunal that consisted of one judge appointed by India had unanimously in December overturned the levy of taxes on Cairn retrospectively and ordered refund of shares sold, dividend confiscated and tax refunds withheld to recover such demand.

The government of India, despite participating in the arbitration proceeding over four years, has not accepted the award and has filed a “setting aside” petition in a court in Netherlands - the seat of the arbitration.

Pressed by its shareholders — some of whom are big global investors — Cairn is seeking to recover the award by confiscating assets and bank accounts of state-owned entities in foreign countries.

“The (arbitration) award is registered and either recognised or soon to be recognised in several countries, and Cairn will continue to ramp up enforcement proceedings around the world to pursue the value of the award for its international shareholders,” he said.

He, however, refused to either name the companies that Cairn will target or the countries where lawsuits will be filed.

Cairn has already got the arbitration award registered and recognised in the US, the UK, Netherlands, France, Canada and Singapore.

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