(1997)128 Singapore Journal of International & Comparative Law
includes, but is not limited to, the question of procedural irregularities”.
49
The Higgins Tribunal further concluded: “rather, the international law
test is (applicable), whether there has been a denial of justice.”
50
It was
because of this accusation of “a denial of justice” and a “generally tainted
background” of the investment license withdrawal,
51
that Indonesia felt
obliged to submit another annulment request. Amco, on the other hand
thought it necessary to also file an annulment request, as the Higgins Award
drastically reduced the original compensation amount of the Goldman Team,
ie, from US$3,200,000 plus 6% interest per annum from the date of filing
of the claim (15 January 1981) to US$2,567,966.20 with 6% interest per
annum as from the date of the Award (5 June 1990).
In the “fourth round” of arbitration proceedings, the Tribunal chaired
by Professor Sompong Sucharitkul of Thailand upheld the Higgins Award,
rejecting both Indonesia’s and Amco’s requests for annulment (dated 3
December 1992 in San Francisco). Although this Tribunal found that the
Higgins Team had not used the legal term “denial of justice” as properly
understood in international law, what the Higgins Team really intended to
point out was that the withdrawal procedure of Amco’s license showed
lack of “due process”, as the Goldman team had remarked. However, according
to the Sucharitkul Team, there was no serious departure from the rule of
procedure, and the rule was not fundamental. It is submitted that in order
to uphold ICSID’s role in dispute settlement, the Sucharitkul award has
upheld the Higgins award. Otherwise, the “annulments” could have gone
on and on forever, rendering the ICSID dispute-solving system unworkable.
52
VII. THE NEW PT LAW 1995 NO 1
As the legal form to be used for a PMA company is prescribed by the
Indonesian Limited Liability Company Law, we should in this survey
elaborate on the new Indonesian PT Law 1995 No 1
53
which was introduced
nine years. This exercise by the Goldman team has been regarded as giving a decision ex
aequo et bono, whereas according to the ICSID Convention, Indonesian law as “law of
the host state” should be used.
50
Arbitration Award, supra, note 46, at para 136.
51
Cf the consideration: “it thus is necessary to decide whether the procedural irregularities
and other background factors in this case amounted to a “denial of justice”, that would taint
the decision of BKPM, regardless of whether BKPM might have had substantive grounds
for its action against AMCO, Arbitration Award, para 137.
52
For a recent criticism of the awards seen from the view of less developed nations, see M
Sornarajah, ‘ICSID Involvement in Asian Foreign Investment Disputes: The Amco and
AAPL Cases’, 4 Asian YIL (1994), at 69 ff.
53
SG 1995 No 13, Elucidation in ASG No 3587.