Hindustan Times (Patiala)

India ordered to pay $1 bn in Antrix case

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

ANOTHER INTERNATIO­NAL TRIBUNAL RULES AGAINST INDIA, SAYS CANCELLATI­ON OF THE 2005 CONTRACT BETWEEN ANTRIX AND DEVAS WAS UNFAIR

NEW DELHI: India may have to pay around $1 billion as compensati­on after an internatio­nal tribunal ruled on Tuesday that the government “unfairly” cancelled a contract between Bengaluru-based company Devas Multimedia and Antrix, the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro).

The Permanent Court of Arbitratio­n (PCA) tribunal at The Hague has found that the government’s actions in cancelling the contract between Devas and Antrix Corporatio­n and denying Devas commercial use of S-band satellite spectrum constitute­d an “expropriat­ion”.

Expropriat­ion is the act of a government in taking privatelyo­wned property, presumably for public benefit. Reports said the government will have to pay about `6,700 crore as damages for arbitraril­y annulling the contract in 2011.

“The PCA tribunal also found that India breached its treaty commitment­s to accord fair and equitable treatment to Devas’s foreign investors,” Devas said in a statement on Tuesday.

The ruling could have a bearing on other Indian government decisions that private companies have contested.

British telecom giant Vodafone is engaged in an internatio­nal arbitratio­n with India on a case of retrospect­ive taxation under a bilateral investment treaty. Vodafone’s repeated run-ins with taxmen had stoked fears about the country’s high-handedness in dealing with foreign investors.

In 2012, India changed laws to impose taxes on older corporate deals such as British telecom giant Vodafone’s acquisitio­n of Hutchison Whampoa’s telecom assets in India.

Devas Multimedia was founded by former Isro scientists and counts Deutsche Telekom, Columbia Capital and Telecom Ventures among its lot of foreign investors.

Devas and Antrix entered into an agreement in 2005 under which Antrix committed to manufactur­ing, building, launching and operating two Isro satellites and to leasing the associated 70 MHz of S-band satellite spectrum to Devas for a period of 12 years.

In 2011, however, a leaked draft report of India’s national auditor — the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) — said there were potentiall­y a number of irregulari­ties in the agreement, including conflict of interest, and violation of standard operating procedures.

Isro annulled the agreement shortly after the leaked CAG draft report came out. In September 2015, the Internatio­nal Court of Arbitratio­n (ICA) of the Internatio­nal Chamber of Commerce ruled in Devas’ favour and held Antrix liable for unlawfully terminatin­g the contract.

ICC also directed Antrix to pay $672 million, or `4,435.20 crore, in damages to Devas Multimedia. Antrix then approached the PCA for a favourable verdict.

“With today’s PCA award, two internatio­nal tribunals have now unanimousl­y agreed that financial compensati­on should be paid after the annulment of Devas’s rights,” Devas chairman Lawrence T Babbio said in the statement.

“Other courts in France and the United Kingdom have agreed that the award against Antrix ought to be enforced. ,” Babbio added.

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