Dutch fund threatens €11m investment dispute with state

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The Dutch investment fund Homburg Eastern European Fund B.V. has notified the State Chancellery about an investment dispute that might be referred to the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, reported LETA Thursday.

The fund owns Homburg Zolitude, a company that was developing a property in the Zolitude neighborhood in Riga where the roof of a Maxima supermarket caved in, killing 54 people in November 2013.

The total amount of the claim is estimated at EUR 11.764 million.

The notice of investment dispute has been handed to the State Chancellery based on the agreement between the governments of Latvia and the Netherlands about promotion and mutual protection of investments that took effect in April 1995.

Homburg Zolitude said that, due to a number of inter-related circumstances and actions by the Riga City Council, it could no longer use the investment object – the unfinished multi-apartment building at 20 Priedaines Street, Riga, situated on the same plot as the collapsed supermarket – and there were no indications that the situation might change for the better.

The company claimed that the Riga City Council had wrongly declared the unfinished building as a dilapidated structure, had been stalling the possible swap of properties, organizing schemes behind Homburg Zolitude’s back that would leave the company with a property that could not be used for any commercial purpose.

In fact, the company's property was as good as expropriated, Homburg Zolitude said.

On its part, Homburg Zolitude has been duly following all instructions from the city council about suspending construction in the wake of the fatal supermarket collapse and helping the families of the victims.

The company urged the Latvian government to find a legitimate and fair solution to the situation with the property of Homburg Zolitude otherwise the investor will have no choice but to file with the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes a claim against Latvia.

The State Chancellery will first study the notice of investment dispute and then decide on the further course of action, Lita Juberte, the press secretary of the Latvian Cabinet of Ministers, told LETA.

As reported, 54 people died and many were injured as the roof of the "Maxima" supermarket in Riga's Zolitude neighborhood caved in on November 21, 2013.

Homburg Zolitude and Tineo used to bee co-owners of the plot of land on which the ill-fated supermarket stood and had plans for further development of the property but construction of the multi-apartment building next to the supermarket was suspended after the tragedy.

The Riga City Council, which intends to create a memorial to the victims of the supermarket in the land plot, struck a deal with Tineo in 2015, which gave 70% of the land plot to the local government as a gift.

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