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Yukos
CFO tells court of legal threats
Yukos chief
financial officer Bruce Mismore yesterday testified that Russian authorities
were threatening him with legal action and possible extradition over attempts
to halt the forced auction of its largest asset on Sunday.
Mr Mismore was giving evidence before a bankruptcy court in Houston, where
Yukos is seeking a temporary injunction against the sale of its Yuganskneftegas
unit.
He said the company's office in Moscow had been raided hours before the
court sat. The General Prosecutor's office in, Moscow confirmed that 20
of its employees had searched the offices.
A Yukos employee said the prosecutors had taken away Anton Zakharov, head
of the company's personnel department.
Mr Mismore said that as a result of his affidavit to the court he had
been informed that Russian authorities would try to pursue criminal charges
against him and even seek his extradition.
Mr Mismore is a US citizen and has worked from his home in Houston since
December 4, citing concern that he faces arrest if he returns to Russia.
Yukos filed for bankruptcy protection in the US on Tuesday, and has also
asked the court to require the Russian government to agree to arbitration
over its long-running tax dispute with Yukos. The move was viewed as a
last-ditch effort to halt Sunday's auction, where Russia's Gazprom is
viewed as the main contender to pick up Yugan-skneftegas. The sale is
viewed by many observers view as a continuation of politically-orchestrated
moves against Yukos.
Judge Letitia Clark may rule on the injunction today following a six-hour
hearing characterised by arguments over the jurisdiction of her court.
Gazprom filed a motion to dismiss late in the hearing, citing a 2002 suit
against Yukos in which the company claimed US courts had no jurisdiction
over its affairs.
Observers in Moscow doubted that a US court would take jurisdiction over
the Yukos case. Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the key shareholder and a former
chief executive of Yukos, who is standing trial for fraud and tax evasion
in Moscow, said through his lawyers that the filing for bankruptcy in
the US "of course will not help the shareholders".
A spokesman for the Russian Federal Property Fund, which will administer
the sale of Yuganskneftegas, said the auction was set to go ahead on December
19 regardless of any US ruling.
However Gazprom, the front bidder for Yuganskneftegas, may find it difficult
to obtain financing if the US court imposes an injunction.
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