Argentina asks world court to consider debt case

TOBY STERLING
Associated Press

AMSTERDAM (AP) — Argentina is seeking to sue the United States at the world court over U.S. court rulings that last week forced the Latin American country into a default.

The International Court of Justice, commonly known as the world court, said in a statement Thursday it has received a request from Argentina to take on the case. There is a major hurdle though: the U.S. must agree to grant the international court jurisdiction if the suit is to proceed.

In a statement, the Hague, Netherlands-based court said Argentina’s filing asserted that U.S. court rulings amount to “violations of Argentine sovereignty.”

The dispute stems from a U.S. court’s order for Argentina to pay in full a group of bondholders led by a New York hedge fund who refused to accept lower payments for restructured bonds following the country’s default in 2001.

The U.S. court, in a decision upheld by the Supreme Court, ordered Argentina to pay the holdout investors about $1.5 billion. It blocked the country from making $539 million in interest payments to bondholders who did accept the restructuring, leading the country into a new default on July 30.

Argentine officials have repeatedly argued that the U.S. court decisions violate its sovereignty.

The default, the country’s second in 13 years, adds increased uncertainty to an economy already in recession.

The International Court of Justice is the United Nations’ court for resolving disputes between nations. In its statement Thursday, it said it has passed on Argentina’s filing to the U.S. government.

It said that no action will be taken in the proceedings “unless and until” the U.S. agrees to grant the U.N. court jurisdiction.

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Associated Press reporter Ben Fox contributed to this story from Buenos Aires.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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