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Viewing cable 06BELGRADE1001, 2006 REPORT ON INVESTMENT DISPUTES AND EXPROPRIATION

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
06BELGRADE1001 2006-06-22 07:14 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Belgrade
VZCZCXYZ0024
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHBW #1001/01 1730714
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 220714Z JUN 06
FM AMEMBASSY BELGRADE
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 8856
UNCLAS BELGRADE 001001 
 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPARTMENT FOR EB/IFD/OIA AND L/CID 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: KIDE EINV EFIN CASC PREL SR MW
SUBJECT: 2006 REPORT ON INVESTMENT DISPUTES AND EXPROPRIATION 
 
REF: STATE 60294 
 
1. Below is the Serbia and Montenegro submission for the 2006 
report on investment disputes and expropriation claims.  As 
requested in reftel, we have sent tracked edits to the Serbia 
and Montenegro portion of the final 2006 report via e-mail to 
EB/IFD/OIA James Roseli.  One of the two investment disputes 
reported in 2005 was resolved to the satisfaction of the U.S. 
investor, and there were eight new property restitution 
claims, some in Serbia and the remainder in Montenegro.  In 
addition, there are 28 prior cases listed below.  Eleven of 
these were inadvertently omitted from last year's submission 
but are included in this submission.  All of the 
expropriation claims listed below are by U.S. persons who 
were not U.S. citizens when the claims arose. 
 
2. Begin text: 
 
SERBIA AND MONTENEGRO 
 
The Embassy is aware of one ongoing investment dispute and 33 
claims of U.S. persons - who were not U.S. citizens when the 
claims arose - related to nationalized property that are 
outstanding against Serbia and Montenegro and/or the 
governments of the member republics (Serbia, Montenegro). 
Seventeen of these claims were listed in Post's 2005 report. 
Post is also aware of eight property restitution claims that 
were reported since submission of last year's report, which 
are presented below.  Post also reports on one investment 
dispute that has been resolved. 
 
INVESTMENT DISPUTES 
 
SERBIA 
 
1. 
 
a) Claimant A 
 
b) 1999 
 
c) In 1990, Claimant A, a U.S. pharmaceutical firm, 
established a joint venture to operate a pharmaceutical plant 
in Belgrade.  Claimant A committed to contribute USD 50 
million plus licenses to drugs in development, the projected 
worth of which was USD 220 million.  The socially (later 
converted into state) owned capital of the company was valued 
at USD 90 million, giving Claimant A control of the company 
with a 75 percent stake. 
 
In 1997, the Serbian parliament passed a law requiring that 
companies revalue their capital to reflect current market 
conditions.  The company failed to do so, and in 1998 the 
Serbian government appointed an investigative mission to 
review the books of the company.  The auditors found that the 
licensed drugs, originally valued at USD 220 million, were 
not delivered.  Accordingly, the Commercial Court in Belgrade 
recalculated the ownership of the company, established that 
it was USD 220 million lower than in the books, and gave 
Claimant A 35 percent of the company, leaving the government 
with 65 percent.  The government then appointed new 
management with close ties to that government.  Claimant A 
responded by filing a USD 500 million lawsuit in the District 
Court of the District of Columbia.  The parties also began 
arbitration hearings in Paris. 
 
In October 2000, the Milosevic regime in Serbia was deposed 
and replaced by a democratically elected government. 
Claimant A, with the support of private security, removed the 
state supported management team and retook control of the 
company.  The previous decision of the Commercial Court 
granting control to the government was appealed, but the 
Court refused to overturn its previous decision. 
 
In January 2001, the ownership dispute led to labor unrest at 
the company as workers, fearful that falling production 
signaled impending layoffs, went on strike.  In response, the 
Commercial Court ruled that a managing board of three 
directors, one each from the state, from Claimant A, and from 
the Court, would jointly manage the company.  Claimant A, 
however, continued to control the company until production 
disputes led the government to call a general shareholder 
meeting in July 2001.  Claimant A boycotted the meeting, 
where new managerial and supervisory boards were appointed. 
The company is currently controlled by the Serbian 
government. 
 
In June 2001, the Embassy arranged a meeting between Claimant 
A and the government at which Claimant A offered a sizeable 
payment in cash and kind in order to secure control of the 
company.  The government refused.  The ownership structure of 
Claimant A changed in 2003, with the Founding Chairman 
exiting the company and a change of name and corporate 
governance structure. 
 
The case was submitted to the International Court of 
Arbitration in Paris for resolution.  The arbitral tribunal 
issued its ruling on November 11, 2004.  The ruling declared 
that Claimant A complied with its obligations under the joint 
venture Foundation Agreement and that Claimant A was entitled 
to the return of all rights over the four licensed drug 
compounds and to repatriate its original cash contribution of 
up to USD 50 million, to be effected through liquidation of 
the company in Serbia.  The ruling further held that if 
dissolution of the company was not carried out within three 
months of the ruling, then the Republic of Serbia, jointly 
and severally with the Serbian Health Fund, would be 
obligated to pay Claimant A the amount of USD 50 million plus 
interest of LIBOR plus 1 percent from the date such a ruling 
should become enforceable until complete payment.  The ruling 
also dismissed any other or contrary claims of the parties 
insofar as they are admissible. 
 
Claimant A met with the Deputy Prime Minister of Serbia in 
Washington on April 22, 2005, and members from the Health 
Fund, Treasury and Ministry of International Economic 
Relations in London on August 31, 2005 to discuss the 
settlement.  U.S. Embassy Belgrade facilitated ongoing 
communication between the parties. 
 
On December 14, 2005, the GOS and Claimant A reached an 
agreement where the GOS would pay USD 28 million by March 
2006, and an additional USD 6 million by March 2007.  This 
settlement is less than the stipulated USD 50 million awarded 
by the International Court of Arbitration, but Claimant A 
agreed to this settlement and accepted the initial payment on 
March 1, 2006. 
 
2. 
 
a) Claimant B 
 
b) 2004 
 
c) On May 19, 2003, Claimant B, a U.S. travel and tourism 
company, purchased 70% of a Serbian tour operator through a 
privatization tender.  In addition to the sale price, under 
the Share Purchase Agreement (SPA), Claimant B took on 
responsibilities for future investments of USD 44.33 million 
and social support to workers and the community of USD 0.555 
million.  Claimant B agreed to invest USD 660,000 by June 30, 
2004 and was also obliged to increase its performance bond 
from USD 2.2 million to USD 9.7 million as a guarantee for 
year two investments by July 1, 2004, according to the SPA. 
 
In mid May 2004, Claimant B requested from the Agency for 
Privatization modification of the SPA seeking a decrease of 
the investment obligation for the second year based on 
complications with securing financing, citing as 
justification bad press about a conflict with small 
shareholders/employees, other media speculation on the 
financial health of Claimant B and a March 2004 announcement 
by the new Serbian government that a large number of past 
privatization deals (including the one involving Claimant B) 
would be reviewed by the Anti-Corruption Council.  The Agency 
did not accept Claimant B's request for amending the SPA, and 
on August 6, 2004 activated and cashed performance bonds in 
the amount of USD 2.2 million.  In September 2004, Claimant B 
announced a breach of its SPA with the Privatization Agency 
because of the calling in of the performance bonds.  On March 
21, 2005, Claimant B sent the Privatization Agency a contract 
termination notice.  In April 2005, Claimant B submitted the 
case to the International Court of Arbitration in Paris. 
 
Embassy Belgrade has actively engaged with Claimant B and the 
Privatization Agency in an effort to support dialogue and a 
solution.  The Privatization Agency has met with Claimant B 
on several occasions and has been open to discussions on a 
mutually acceptable solution.  Claimant B has proposed that 
it return its 70% stake in the Serbian company in exchange 
for return of the purchase price.  The Privatization Agency 
has noted that some assets of the company were sold by 
Claimant B after it assumed control, complicating such a 
solution.  Several third parties have expressed potential 
interest in purchasing from Claimant B its shareholding and 
obligations under the SPA.  The Privatization Agency has no 
objection to such a solution, but requires official 
documentation that a third party assumes Claimant B's 
obligations and assets under the SPA. 
 
On July 14, 2005, the Privatization Agency terminated the SPA 
with the Claimant B due to failure to meet obligations under 
the SPA.  According to the Law on Privatization, when a buyer 
fails to meet contractual obligations, the offered property 
is transferred to the Share Fund and is prepared for 
privatization again.  Negotiations between the Privatization 
Agency and Claimant B are still underway, regardless of the 
pending arbitration. 
 
PROPERTY EXPROPRIATIONS 
 
SERBIA 
 
3. 
 
a) Claimant C 
 
b) December 1958 
 
c) All property is located in Belgrade.  Building one: seven 
ground floor stores, nine one-bedroom apartments, four two- 
bedroom apartments, six studio apartments, and one separate 
room, with yard.  Building two: building has been demolished, 
currently used as parking lot, former building consisted of 
seven ground floor stores, 11 one-room apartments, four one- 
bedroom apartments, six two-bedroom apartments, and one four- 
bedroom apartment. Building three: seven ground floor stores, 
three one-bedroom apartments, eight two-bedroom apartments, 
three three-bedroom apartments;  Building four: three ground 
floor stores, one one-bedroom apartment, seven two-bedroom 
apartments, one three-bedroom apartment, three studio 
apartments; Building five: family home with yard. 
 
All property was nationalized as a result of the Law on 
Nationalization in 1958. 
 
By appealing to the Ministry of Finance and the Privatization 
Agency, the Claimant has been trying to prevent the sale of 
the nationalized property as a part of the Serbian 
government's privatization process.  In response to attempts 
to include some of Claimant C's properties in privatization 
auctions, the Embassy sent a diplomatic note to the Ministry 
of Foreign Affairs in 2003 asking the Ministry to work with 
other relevant government agencies to postpone any steps to 
offer the Claimant's properties for sale until a law on 
restitution is passed that provides a legal mechanism for 
adjudicating ownership claims. Our understanding is that the 
claimant's property, currently used as a parking lot, was 
purchased by Hypo-Alpe-Adria Bank, which plans to soon begin 
construction of a building on the site.  The Embassy sent a 
letter to the Bank showing its interest in the case. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Claimant C regularly provides updates to the Embassy on the 
status of the various claims.  Latest information was 
received in May 2006. 
 
4. 
 
a) Claimant D 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) The property consists of the following: 
Piece of land in the center of the spa resort "Divcibare", 
warranty deed 166/38, which was given to the spa by the 
authorities for use and occupancy.  Real property in 
Belgrade, located at Mekenzijeva 87, consisting of four 
residential apartments, two commercial units.  Real property 
at Boulevard Oslobodjenja, consists of a two-story building 
with five one-bedroom, two two-bedroom apartments, and two 
commercial units, and another building with two apartments. 
 
The property was nationalized from the grandfather of the 
claimant. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in January 2005. 
 
5. 
 
a) Claimant E 
 
b) 1948 
 
c) All property is located in Kolari, Smederevo, comprising 
an agricultural mill and 50 hectares of land. 
 
The property was confiscated as a result of the Law of 
Nationalization of private industry. 
 
Estimate value is $1,000,000. 
 
Last contact was in September 2004. 
 
 
6. 
 
a) Claimant F 
 
b) 1959 
 
c) Property consists of four-story building in Makedonska 11- 
13 , a five-story building at the corner of Brace Jugovica 23 
and Skadarska 2, and the building site in Lomina 10. 
 
The property was confiscated as a result of the Law on 
Nationalization. 
 
Estimate value is $3,031,000. 
 
Last contact was in May 2006. 
 
7. 
 
a) Claimant G 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) All property is located in Belgrade, consists of several 
commercial units at Terazije 16. 
 
The property was nationalized as a result of the Law on 
Nationalization. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in March 2006. 
 
8. 
 
a) Claimant H 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) Property is located in Belgrade, on Terazije square and in 
the Kolubara region. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
The property was nationalized as a result of the Law on 
Nationalization. 
 
Claimaint H regularly provides updates to the Embassy on the 
status of the various claims.  Latest information was 
received in May 2006. 
 
9. 
 
a) Claimant I 
 
b) 1956 
 
c) Property is located in Belgrade, consists of one building 
at Svetogorska 6-8; the building includes a large garage and 
two small shops. 
 
The property was confiscated as a result of the Law on 
Confiscation. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in April 2005. 
 
10. 
 
a) Claimant J 
 
b) April 30, 1961 
 
c) Property is located in Belgrade, at Kralja Petra 6, 
building which includes a historical Belgrade restaurant. 
 
The property was nationalized as a result of the Law on 
Nationalization. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in March 2006. 
 
11. 
 
a) Claimant K 
 
b) 1961 
 
c) Property is located in Belgrade. 
 
The property was nationalized as a result of the Law on 
Nationalization. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in April 2005. 
 
12. 
 
a) Claimant L 
 
b) 1948 
 
c) Property is located in Belgrade and the spa town of 
Vrnjacka Banja. 
 
The property was nationalized as a result of the Law of 
Nationalization. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in September 2004. 
 
13. 
 
a) Claimant M 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) Property consists of a brewery located in Valjevo. 
 
The property was confiscated as a result of the Law on 
Nationalization. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in August 2004. 
 
14. 
 
a)  Claimant N 
 
b)  1945 
 
c)  All property is located in Belgrade, except some 
agricultural properties (mostly vineyards) in Smederevo and 
Paracin.  Hotel QSrpski kralj was severely damaged by the 
German bombings of Belgrade in 1941 and subsequently 
nationalized and razed by the Communist authorities.  The 
remaining vacant lot, located on Rajiceva Street, 
intermittently is used as a coffee terrace. 
 
The Flour Milling Complex, encompassing half a dozen separate 
buildings in downtown Belgrade, was damaged by the German 
bombings in 1941, confiscated in 1945, plundered of all 
equipment and remained an empty shell for almost 50 years, 
used as an illicit warehouse. 
 
Weifert Brewery, majority-owned, confiscated in 1945 and 
subsequently renamed QBeogradska Industrija PivaQ, still 
remains in a working condition. 
 
Several large office and apartment buildings in the very 
center of Belgrade. 
 
Family house in Bircaninova 21. 
 
All property was confiscated as a result of the Law on 
Confiscation in 1945. 
 
Claimant has appealed to the Ministry of Finance and 
Privatization Agency to prevent the sale of the nationalized 
property as a part of privatization process; Post does not 
have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Claimant N regularly provides updates to the Embassy on the 
status of the various claims.  Latest information was 
received in May 2006. 
 
15. 
 
a) Claimant O 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) Property, the Hotel QExcelsiorQ, located in a very 
favorable location in downtown Belgrade. 
 
All property was confiscated as a result of the Law on 
Confiscation in 1945. 
Claimant has appealed to the Ministry of Finance and 
Privatization Agency to prevent the sale of the nationalized 
property as a part of privatization process; Post does not 
have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in 2004. 
 
16. 
 
a)  Claimant P 
 
b)  1962 
 
c)  Property is located in Belgrade. 
 
All property was confiscated as a result of a political 
process against the claimant.  The property consisted of a 
house located at Janka Prmrla Vojka St. 6 in Belgrade, 
business space in Perlez (near Zrenjanin), money, car and 
gold. 
 
Claimant has been trying to recover his property through 
several court proceedings for years. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in May of 2006. 
 
17. 
 
a) Claimant Q 
 
b) 1946 
 
c) Property is a building located at Maglajska 21, Belgrade. 
 
All property was confiscated as a result of a political 
process against the father of the claimants, who was tried in 
absentia by the Special Military Court IV Yugoslav Army and 
sentenced to life imprisonment. 
 
Claimants have been trying to recover the property through 
several court proceedings for couple of years. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in October 2005. 
 
18. 
 
a) Claimant R 
 
b) 1950 
 
c) Property is located in Knic, near Gornji Milanovac.  It 
comprises a farm, on which a cold storage plant was built and 
is currently occupied by the food-processing factory QTakovo 
frm Gornji Milanovac. 
 
The property was confiscated as a result of a political 
process against the gandfather of the claimant, who was an 
active suporter of an anti-communist movement. 
 
It is unknwn whether the claimant has tried to recover the 
property through the legal system of Serbia. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in October 2005. 
 
19. 
 
a) Claimant S 
 
b) 1948 
 
c) It is a printing and publishing house QPrivredni pregled 
(aka QSlobodan JovicQ) located at Stojana Protica 52 
Belgrade; and a separate building, consisting of five 
apartments, at Dubljanska 82, Belgrade. 
 
The property was nationalized, from the parents of the 
claimant, as a part of the Law on Nationalization in 1948. 
 
It is unknown whether the claimant has tried to recover the 
property through the legal system of Serbia. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in February 2004. 
 
20. 
 
a) Claimant T 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) Property consists of a confiscated industrial property, 
QRatko Pavlovic-NiteksQ in Nis, Serbia. 
 
The property was confiscated as a part of the Confiscation 
Law in 1945. 
 
It is unknown whether the claimant has tried to recover the 
property through the legal system of Serbia. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in May 2006. 
 
21. 
 
a) Claimant U 
 
b) 1946 
 
c) Land which is currently occupied by the AD QSokolacQ in 
Novic Becej, Serbia.  We do not have information on how much 
land this entails. 
 
The property was confiscated as a part of the Agricultural 
Reform in 1946. 
 
The claimant has tried to recover the property through the 
legal system of Serbia. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in March of 2005. 
 
22. 
 
a) Claimant V 
 
b) 1946 
 
c) Agricultural land, at the village of Pacir in Backa 
Topola, Serbia.  We do not have information on how much land 
this entails. 
 
The property was confiscated as a part of the Agricultural 
Reform in 1946. 
 
It is unknown whether the claimant has tried to recover the 
property through the legal system of Serbia. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in February 2005. 
 
23. 
 
a) Claimant W 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) Property is a confiscated family house located at Milosa 
Obrenovica 1, Bajna Basta, Serbia. 
 
The property was confiscated, from the father of the 
claimant, as a part of the Confiscation Law in 1945. 
 
It is unknown whether the claimant has tried to recover the 
property through the legal system of Serbia. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in February 2003. 
 
24. 
 
a) Claimant X 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) The property consists of two buildings.  One of them 
currently encompasses the entire site where Slavija, 
Makenzijeva and Prote Mateje Streets meet; the area is used 
as a large open-air parking lot.  The second building is a 
residential building on Brace Nedica 22, Belgrade. 
 
The property was confiscated, from the father of the 
claimant, who was proclaimed an Qenemy of the stateQ. 
It is unknown whether the claimant has tried to recover the 
property through the legal system of Serbia. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Claimant X regularly provides updates to the Embassy on the 
status of the various claims.  Latest information was 
received in May 2006. 
 
NEW CASES 
 
25. 
 
a) Claimant Y 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) Property consists of three parcels in Knez Danilo Street 
with a building, and what was previously large brick factory 
in the area of Zvezdara in Belgrade. 
 
The property was confiscated from the father of the claimant. 
 
The claimant has registered the property as a restitution 
claim with the Republican Property Directorate in accordance 
with the Law on Registration. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in February 2006. 
 
26. 
 
a) Claimant Z 
 
b) 1945 
 
c) Property consists of a building containing office space in 
Maksima Gorkog Street 13, and land in Uzicka Street 14. 
 
The property was confiscated from the father of the claimant. 
 
The claimant has registered the property with the Republican 
Property Directorate in accordance with the Law on 
Registration. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in March 2006. 
 
27. 
 
a) Clamant Z1 
 
b) 1945-1958 
 
c) Property consists of the following: entire building with 
several smaller buildings and land in Maksima Gorkog St. 93, 
building and land in Jovana Cvijica St. 84, buildings and 
land in Kajmakcalanska St. 2 and Zarka Zrenjanina St. 33, 
land in Vasina St. 16, various agricultural properties in the 
vicinity of Curug in Vojvodina. 
 
The property was confiscated, from the father and grandfather 
of the claimant. 
 
The claimant has registered the property with the Republican 
Property Directorate in accordance with the Law on 
Registration. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in April 2006. 
 
28. 
 
a) Clamant Z2 
 
b) 1959 
 
c) Property consists of a building containing an apartment 
and office space in Bulevar JNA 221. 
 
The property was confiscated from the father of the claimant. 
 
The claimant has registered the property with the Republican 
Property Directorate in accordance with the Law on 
Registration. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was in November 2005. 
 
29. 
 
a) Claimant Z3 
 
b) 1947 
 
c) Property consists of a building and land, located in the 
most prestigious area in Belgrade on Uzicka Street in 
Dedinje. 
 
The property was confiscated from the claimant's mother, late 
Princess Olga Karadjordjevic. 
 
The claimant has registered the property with the Republican 
Property Directorate in accordance with the Law on 
Registration. 
 
Post does not have an estimated value of the property. 
 
Last contact was on June 1 2006. 
 
MONTENEGRO 
 
1. 
 
a) Claimant Z4 
 
b) 1954 
 
c) ClaimantQs property is located in Petrovac na moru, 
Municipality of Budva. After World War II, one parcel was 
divided by the City and Municipality of Budva into two 
smaller parcels.  The newly created parcel was confiscated 
from the claimant in 1954 and assigned to the former Yugoslav 
oil company "Nafta".  The company built a six-unit apartment 
building for its employees. In 1973 "Nafta" was dissolved. 
The previous parcel, with the building on it, was transferred 
and recorded as a property of the Republic of Montenegro. 
The claimant instituted legal proceedings against the 
Republic of Montenegro.  The claimant addressed the issue to 
the U.S. Consulate Podgorica in December 2004. At the last 
court proceeding in April 2005, the court decided in favor of 
the claimant and awarded him around 400,000 EUR. 
 
As of June 2006, the claimant has not been paid.  The Higher 
Court revoked the decision of the District court due to 
discrepancies of property valuation.  The claimant's attorney 
claims that the Higher Court's decision is not in accordance 
with the law and that the Higher Court revoked the decision 
because the amount to be compensated (400,000 EUR) was too 
high. 
 
2. 
 
a) Claimant Z5 
 
b) 1958 
 
c) ClaimantQs property, inherited from parents, is located in 
Budva.  A great deal of the property was confiscated under 
communist laws.  The hunting Association QPrimorjeQ from 
Budva submitted a claim to the Municipality of Budva to buy 
the land in order to build a hunting club. By the claimantQs 
intervention with the Municipality of Budva, the signing of 
the AssociationQs request had been temporarily postponed. The 
claimant's attorney addressed this issue to the U.S. 
Consulate Podgorica in April 2005. The Consulate sent a 
letter to the Municipality of Budva asking that it defer the 
sale of the property until the claimant has an opportunity to 
make a claim for restitution of the property. On June 16, the 
legal representative of the claimant informed the Consulate 
that the Municipality of Budva had decided to sell the 
property to the Hunting Association. 
 
3. 
 
a) Claimants Z6 (involves three claimants; all three are 
American citizens) 
 
b) 1981 
 
c) ClaimantsQ property, a house under construction and a 
stable, is located in Ulcinj.  Two of the claimants inherited 
property from the father.  In 1981, a part of the property 
was expropriated from the father (the size of the property 
was over 5,000 m2).  One part of the expropriated property is 
used for the CityQs bus station and parking, whereas the rest 
of the property remains vacant. The claimants were unable to 
use the rest of the property (which is over 3,000 m2), since 
no possible access to the property was left.  The father was 
never compensated for facilities that were on the property. 
 
The claimants filed a claim for restitution of the property 
in December 2004 and addressed this issue to the President of 
the Republic, Prime Minister of the Republic, President of 
the Supreme Court, Municipality of Ulcinj, and the District 
Court in Ulcinj.  The claimants requested access to their 
property by cars and agricultural machineries, restitution of 
unused part of the property and compensation of the part used 
by the Bus Station and parking.  The claimants submitted a 
claim to defer the proposed sale of the bus station, but a 
decision has not been made. 
 
4. 
 
a) Claimant Z7 
 
b) 1967 
 
c) ClaimantQs property is located in Cetinje.  The property 
was confiscated in 1967.  We have no information on the size 
of property and no other details. 
 
5. 
 
a) Claimants Z8 (involves two American citizens) 
 
b) 2004 
 
c) ClaimantQs property is located in Lastva, Municipality of 
Kotor.  In March 2005 the claimant visited Montenegro with 
the intent of beginning the process of building a family 
vacation home on the land.  An official in the planning 
office in Kotor told the claimant that the land had been 
rezoned within the last year as a QgreenQ belt and 
agricultural area and therefore no building would be allowed. 
There was a locally advertised appeal period during which 
resident landowners in the affected area were notified and 
did appeal and were granted building variances. The claimant 
was never notified and thus was denied any possibility of 
appeal.  The claimant addressed this issue to the Mayor of 
Kotor and to the U.S. Consulate in Podgorica. 
 
The total land area and estimated value are unknown. 
 
6. 
 
a) Claimant Z9 
 
b) 2004 
 
c) ClaimantQs property is located in Igalo, Municipality of 
Herceg Novi.  Property was confiscated by the Communist 
regime.  The case was forwarded to the Embassy in Belgrade in 
July 2004. 
 
NEW CASES 
 
1. 
a) Claimant Z10 
 
b) 1953 
 
c) ClaimantQs property is located in Sveti Stefan, Petrovac 
Na Moru and Buljarica, Municipality of Budva.  The property 
was confiscated from the claimant in 1953 and 1967.  It is 
now a part of Hotel Company "Budvanska Riviera" (Grand Hotel 
Sveti Stefan, Villa Olive in Petrovac).  These facilities are 
currently an issue of negotiations for rent/sale to foreign 
bidders. The rest of confiscated property is under the 
jurisdiction of the Municipality of Budva (used as a soccer 
playground). The claimant instituted legal proceedings 
against the Republic of Montenegro and filed for 
compensation. The claimant brought the issue to U.S. 
Consulate Podgorica in January 2006. 
 
2. 
 
a) Claimant Z11 
 
b) 2000 
 
c) Claimant's property, inherited from father, is located in 
Gusinje, Municipality of Plav.  The claimant's property, a 
family house, was taken in 1985 by the company AD "Plavsko 
Jezero" ("The Lake of Plav") without claimant's consent.  The 
company opened a restaurant out of the house.  The claimant 
asserts that the restaurant is operating illegally without 
work permits and ownership title to the house. 
 
The claimant filed an appeal to the Higher Court in Bijelo 
Polje in order to seek the return of her property and/or 
obtain compensation from AD "Plavsko jezero".  The Higher 
Court in Bijelo Polje denied the appeal.  The claimant 
addressed this issue to the U.S. Consulate Podgorica in April 
2006.  The Consulate sent a letter to the President of the 
Basic Court in Plav asking that it take necessary measures 
for rapid and just solution on the dispute. 
 
3. 
 
a) Claimants Z12 
 
b) 1965 
 
c) ClaimantsQ property, inherited from grandparents, is 
located in Danilovgrad.  The claimant filed for property 
restitution in May 2005.   The case was forwarded to the 
Consulate in Podgorica in September 2005. 
 
 
Serbia: 
Claimant A:  Valeant Pharmaceuticals (formerly ICN) 
Claimant B:  Uniworld Holdings 
Claimant C:  Marko Rakocevic and Janet Kostrevski 
Claimant D:  Ivan Vasic 
Claimant E:  Milica Markovic 
Claimant F:  Jelena Glisovic-Rasic 
Claimant G:  Aleksandar Djordjevic 
Claimant H:  Sofija Dimic-Ilic 
Claimant I:  Marija Stojadinovic-Shoup 
Claimant J:  Vladimir Pavlovic 
Claimant K:  Milica Skinner 
Claimant L:  Dimitrije Djordjevic and Jelena Markovic 
Claimant M:  Nikola Djurdjevic 
Claimant N:  Bogdan Veljkovic 
Claimant O:  Mila Petkovich 
Claimant P:  Lazar Dragin 
Claimant Q:  Stefanie Avsenek 
Claimant R:  Radmilo Djokic 
Claimant S:  Boris Ivezic 
Claimant T:  Zora Mikler 
Claimant U:  Christian Sauska 
Claimant V:  Stevan Geza Silbiger 
Claimant W:  Milena Trickovic 
Claimant X:  Olivera Carlson 
 
New Claims in Serbia: 
Claimant Y:  Zoran Cupic 
Claimant Z:  Nikola Vulkovic 
Claimant Z1: Sanja Popovic Spinelli 
Claimant Z2: Zoran Dordevic 
Claimant Z3: Princess Elizabeth Karageorgevich 
 
Montenegro: 
Claimant Z4: Jefto Davidovich 
Claimant Z5: Angelina Perry 
Claimant Z6: Joseph Briskovic, Luc Brisku, Ibrahim Musovic 
Claimant Z7: Miomir Vukmanovic 
Claimant Z8: Mary Duletich Ellerd, Anne Preston 
Claimant Z9: Spiro Jankovich 
 
New claims in Montenegro: 
Claimant Z10: Marko Nicholas Gregovich 
Claimant Z11: Raza Sinanaj 
Claimant Z12: Serge Babic 
 
POLT