The Maldives
has won a court case allowing it to cancel a $511 million airport development
contract with GMR Infrastructure (GMRI.NS), clearing the way for it to take over its
main airport.
The
contract for Ibrahim Nasir International Airport, agreed in 2010, was the
largest foreign investment in the south Asian tropical island chain famous for
its luxury beach resorts popular with honeymooners and scuba divers.
But it
has become embroiled in a bitter political argument, threatening to cloud foreign
investor sentiment towards a country seeking overseas cash for many of its
tourism projects.
"The
Maldives government has the power to do what it wants, including expropriating
the airport," Sundaresh Menon, the Chief Justice of Singapore, said in court
on Thursday.
His
ruling came after GMR won a brief reprieve on Monday when a court order
suspended the government's decision to cancel the contract, although the
Maldives still pressed ahead with plans to take over the airport.
A
spokesman for the Maldives president said the government would call for
international tenders in about 18 months to continue with the airport
modernisation.
Shares
in GMR Infrastructure were down as much as 4.2 percent following the ruling
after earlier being in positive territory on the day. They later pared some of
those losses.
Andrew
Harrison, chief executive officer of the airport project, said it was too soon
to discuss the practicalities of a handover.
"We've
always been advocates of following the law. We are waiting to review the full
judgment, which is currently being written up. It is too early to comment
officially. We will have a staff briefing tomorrow afternoon," he told
Reuters.
GMR
employs 1,800 people at the airport, 95 percent of whom are locals.
"We
will take over. We will enroll all those people from GMR who wish to join.
Those who don't can go home. By Friday midnight we will take over," Imad
Masood, the Maldives president's media spokesman, told Reuters, adding that the
Maldives would pay compensation to GMR.
The two
sides have not yet agreed on terms of compensation.
"We
will go for international tenders maybe in one-and-half years from now. But
they will be very transparent," he added.
The
Maldives, south-west of India, terminated an agreement with GMR last week,
rattling its relations with its neighbour.
"GMR
is the biggest Indian investment in Male and we are only insisting for
adherence to the legal process. Nothing more, nothing less," Syed
Akbaruddhin, spokesman for India's foreign ministry, said on Thursday.
The
cancellation of the contract follows a year of political turmoil in the
Maldives that saw the ousting of its former president and months of unrest.
The
contract to upgrade and operate the airport and build a new terminal came after
a global tender overseen by the World Bank and signed under former president
Mohamed Nasheed's administration.
The
project was implemented through a joint venture company comprising GMR
Infrastructure Limited and Malaysia Airports Holding Berhad (MAHB.KL).
However,
Nasheed's rivals filed legal action saying the contract was invalid as it
contained a $25 airport development charge per outgoing passenger which was not
authorised by parliament.
http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/12/06/maldives-gmr-airport-contract-idINDEE8B505420121206
No comments:
Post a Comment