Article text:
THE HAGUE/KUALA LUMPUR, June 27 (Reuters) - A Dutch court of appeal dismissed on Tuesday a bid by eight descendants of a former sultanate to enforce a $15-billion arbitration award against the Malaysian government, which hailed the decision as a "landmark victory".
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said the government was confident it was "closer than ever to completely nullifying" the award after the decision.
"Malaysia trusts that today’s decision ... will put an end to the frivolous attempts of the claimants to enforce the purported final award in other jurisdictions," Anwar said in a statement.
Last year, a Paris arbitration court awarded $14.9 billion to the Filipino heirs of the last sultan of Sulu, in a long-running dispute with Malaysia over a colonial-era land deal.
They have since sought to seize Malaysian government assets in France, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, in a bid to enforce the award.
Malaysia, which did not participate in the arbitration, says the process is illegal. It secured a stay on the award in France but the ruling remains enforceable overseas under a U.N. treaty on arbitration.
In September, the heirs sought permission from a Dutch court to enforce the award in the Netherlands, Reuters reported.
However, Dutch judges sided with Malaysia, saying the original pact lacked a clause binding parties to arbitration and the French stay meant the claim was not enforceable in the Netherlands, the court said on its website on Tuesday.
Lawyer Paul Cohen, acting for the Sulu heirs, said they were disappointed with the court decision. He would not say if they would lodge an appeal against the ruling.
The dispute stems from an 1878 deal between European colonists and the Sultan of Sulu for use of his territory, which spanned parts of the southern Philippines and present-day Malaysia on the island of Borneo.
Independent Malaysia paid a token sum annually to the sultan's heirs to honour the agreement but stopped in 2013, after supporters of the former sultanate launched a bloody incursion to reclaim land from Malaysia.
The heirs say they were not involved in the incursion and sought arbitration over the suspension of payments.
This month, a Paris court upheld the Malaysian government's challenge against enforcing a partial award to the heirs. Malaysia said the decision implied the final arbitration award would be annulled.
Reporting by Stephanie van den Berg and Rozanna Latiff in Kuala Lumpur; Editing by Robert Birsel, Clarence Fernandez and Mark Potter
Related post:
Malaysia wins Dutch case over Sulu heirs’ US$15 billion award on [email protected]
Edited title to reflect the linked article's title.
The Malaysian PM's statement reads like a load of propaganda. If we had a semi-decent president, she may have offered at least a token statement to defend the Philippine claim. Hayyy
Not really surprising though. However, any response from the Philippine side, I think would be fraught with difficulties as, and I might be very wrong in this, the Philippine government distances itself from the actions of the claimants to the Sultan of the Sultanate of Sulu. Again, I might be wrong here, and could very well be talking out of my ass.
But then again, we currently have a president whose father had some ambitions regarding Sabah, and whose career pretty much has depended on the (sanitized and rose-tinted) image of his father. As far as my own speculation goes, I am thinking the current government is trying to play things safe, and perhaps they've decided that saying nothing is the safest move here.