Dubai Port Deal Is Delayed Over Protest
By JANE WARDELL
The Associated Press
Friday, March 3, 2006; 12:40 PM
LONDON -- A Miami company objecting to the takeover of
British shipping company P&O by Dubai's state-owned DP
World said Friday it has been granted the right to take
the case to Britain's Court of Appeal _ a move that puts
the deal on hold.
Miami-based Eller & Co., which says its business could
be harmed by U.S. concerns over a United Arab Emirates
company controlling significant operations at six major
U.S. seaports, said Britain's Court of Appeal would hear
its petition for an appeal on Monday.

Duncan Robertson, the United Kingdom official
representative of Eller & Co. outside the Royal Courts
of Justice in London Thursday March 2, 2006. Eller,
which provides cargo handling services to 90 percent of
cruise ships in the Port of Miami, USA, had a last
minute appeal dismissed by Justice Warren as he gave the
required go-ahead for the Dubai based DP World's 3.9
billion pound (US$ 6.8 billion) acquisition of the
Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co. ( P&O. ).
The deal has caused uproar in the United States among
lawmakers concerned about port security and that the
United Arab Emirates company would own significant
operations in six major US seaports. The judge did give
Eller a stay till 1500 local Friday to allow them to go
to the Court of Appeal. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)
(Alastair Grant - AP)
If the right to appeal is granted, the higher court will
immediately hear the case.
"We don't take the decision to appeal lightly," Eller
said in a statement issued in London. "However, we are
deeply concerned for the future of our business and the
livelihood of thousands of our staff and contractors and
we will do everything in our power to secure their
future."
P&O runs shipping terminals in New York, New Jersey,
Baltimore, New Orleans, Miami and Philadelphia _ a fact
that has caused an uproar among lawmakers and businesses
in the United States concerned about an Arab company
taking over the ports.
DP World has attempted to defuse some of the tension by
submitting itself to a second 45-day investigation by
the U.S. government, despite already receiving
regulatory approval for the deal.
The 3.9 billion pound ($6.8 billion) acquisition of the
Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co. needs
approval by the High Court _ approval that was granted
Thursday by Justice Nicholas Warren.
However, Warren placed a hold on his ruling to allow
Eller to take the case to the higher court, and it will
not become effective unless the Court of Appeal refuses
to hear the case.
Lawyers for DP World have warned that a delay beyond
Friday means the company will not be able to access the
millions of dollars it needs to pay shareholders on
time. The deal was previously scheduled to be completed
Thursday.
Both P&O and DP World will incur hefty costs while the
case drags on and lawyers have said they intend to
pursue Eller for the High Court costs when the appeal is
decided.
P&O noted that Warren refused to grant Eller the right
to appeal _ but allowed the company to approach the
higher court directly _ because he believed it had
little chance of success.
"The boards of P&O and DP World remain confident of
concluding the transaction on the agreed terms," the
shipping firm said in a statement.
President Bush has supported the takeover deal and
lawmakers initially opposed seem to have softened
slightly, tempering calls for an immediate vote to block
the takeover. Many said the new probe reassured them and
negated the need for legislation for now.
A U.S. federal judge has also ruled against a request by
New Jersey to order an investigation into the takeover.
Warren said in his ruling Thursday that U.S. concerns
about port security and threats of port authorities
withdrawing business were partly fueled by Eller and
that he did not find them credible.
He also dismissed Eller's claim that P&O allowed a
series of procedural failings during the bid process,
including the misdirection of letters to shareholders in
Australia that left them uninformed about crucial
meetings.
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