Earlier this year, the French oil company Total filed a
request for arbitration against the government of Uganda using a legal
mechanism, known as ISDS (investor-state dispute settlement.) ISDS is mainly used
against developing countries. Sometimes because they clearly behaved badly
towards an investor, but in other cases it’s more likely that it is used as a
bargaining tool and a threat by multinational companies for better deals.
Litigation costs amount to 8 million dollars on average, calculated the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
The French oil company Total is refusing to pay tax. It
acquired a 33 per cent share in a 2.9 billion dollar project owned by Tullow
Oil. According to Ugandan law, when a stock is bought, a stamp duty must be
paid. However, the oil firm refuses to do so, citing no legal obligation to
honor the government claims. Total has not disclosed how much tax is at the
heart of the dispute or why it objects to the tax levy but a source at the
Uganda Revenue Authority told Reuters earlier that the Production Sharing
Agreement (PSA) includes a tax waiver.
Total’s Corporate Affairs Manager Ms. Ahlem Friga-Noy stated
that “given the applicable confidentiality obligations, we are not in a
position to comment further on the proceedings.”
The Office of the Attorney General of the Government of
Uganda replies in the same manner: “We are under obligation not to disclose the
content of the matter to the public until it is appropriate.”
In a court room all affected parties and stakeholders have
the right to speak, or at least listen, but an arbitration procedure is very
secretive. No one is obliged to disclose details. Has the state really behaved
badly? Or is it the company who abuses arbitration as a pressure to get a tax
reduction? The public remains completely in the dark, until the final verdict
of the tribunal is published, which can be a multimillion dollar fine.
The problem Uganda now faces has been made possible by the
Bilateral Investment Treaty signed in 2000 with the Netherlands. According to
the treaty, all Dutch investors in Uganda have the right to pursue arbitration
before the World Bank court if they feel treated unfairly. The French company
Total Uganda registered itself as a Dutch company. This is known as the Dutch
Sandwich; you put a Dutch company in between and then you become a Dutch
investor. Which turns the treaty into a tool to drag a state before a tribunal
of three men in Washington, having a commercial background and the ability to
award billion dollar fines, without a possibility to appeal. If Uganda is
condemned to a compensation but refuses to pay, the company has the right to
seize Ugandan assets in the world.
This is against Ugandan law, says the renowned Human Rightslawyer Isaac Ssemakadde. “According to the constitution, taxation is wholly the
creation of the law of the state.” Which means that disputes have to be settled
on the basis of the law alone. “Even an agreement between parties cannot
supercede the obligation fixed in the law. There is therefore no room for
arbitration on taxation,” he said.
“In an earlier tax dispute, between Heritage Oil and Gas
against Uganda Revenue Authority, the High Court has forbidden the state to
refer proceedings to the arbitration processes in London or anywhere else
outside the jurisdiction of the Ugandan courts of law,” noted Ssemakadde. In
short, “Total is being treated differently to other business persons which is
in violation of article 21 of the constitution of Uganda which states that all
persons are equal before and under the law.” Nobody can check Total’s claims
about a tax waiver, because the Product Sharing Agreements are confidential.
This is so despite the fact that Uganda has an Access to Information law that
was promulgated in 2005. This limits the discussion, and knowledge, about the
proceedings in the country’s oil sector to senior politicians and bureaucrats.
The ordinary Ugandan is kept in darkness about what happens there. The secrecy
is not only advantageous for oil companies, but also for certain politicians,
who seem to be interested in “personalizing” the oil resources. The Ugandan
president Yoweri Museveni recently told Ugandans that those people who are
challenging him politically in the forthcoming general elections “are after my
oil.”
“In the end, it’s the ordinary Ugandan taxpayer to bear the
brunt and consequences for the enormous amounts of money that is going to be
spent on this arbitration process,” says Ssemakadde. “Whereas Total can afford
to maintain a given team of lawyers in Washington for, say, a month, Uganda can
hardly afford this.” The people remain ignorant about the deals that are made,
and who exercises pressure on whom. Unless the general public starts to view
the oil, as well as the treaties their government signs, as belonging to them
and not the selected few in government, companies like Total will continue
dragging the state into expensive arbitration processes.
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