UAE Arbitration law set for year-end | Gulf News

The UAE expects to pass a draft federal arbitration law this year which will help boost investor confidence and strengthen the country's investment environment, Minister of Economy Sultan Bin Saeed Al Mansouri said here at a conference yesterday.

“Arbitration is of major importance in attracting investments and achieving the development and stability of the national economy,” Al Mansouri said.

“I do hope we will be able to pass it by the end of this year. We will try to move on it as fast as possible. It will help prevent accumulation of cases in courts,” he added.

“Arbitration is one of the key instruments to resolve disputes amicably and thus enhance investor confidence in the economy's fundamentals to support businesses.”

He said the country is in the process of developing about 14 regulations, which include a law on foreign investment, a companies law and a competition law.

The draft law addresses arbitration procedures, confidentiality, and the selection of arbitrators.

It will also cover Islamic arbitration and will be the first to govern arbitration and reconciliation procedures nationwide.

Both Dubai and Abu Dhabi have arbitration centres — the Dubai International Arbitration Centre and the Abu Dhabi Conciliation and Arbitration Centre — that deal with cases on an emirate level.

The draft federal law of arbitration is taking feedback from these centres as well as the International Islamic Centre for Reconciliation and Arbitration.

via gulfnews : Arbitration law set for year-end.

Islamic Finance Practices Face Their First Test With Dubai World Debt

The Am Law Daily wrote on Tuesday about the mass of law firms that rushed into Dubai over the past two years to get in on the real estate and financing boom sweeping the Gulf region, but we wanted to know a bit more about the climate there this week, now that Dubai World, the massive sovereign wealth conglomerate, has announced plans to restructure about half its $60 billion in outstanding debt. So we called Jawad Ali, a King & Spalding partner based in Dubai and the deputy head of the firms Middle East & Islamic Finance practice group.

Ali, who has worked mostly in the Middle East since 1994, specializes in Islamic financial products, such as sukuk, products that act much like traditional bonds but remain in compliance with Islamic law, or Shariah. The law forbids interest as well as financial products that generally allow investors to, in Alis words, “make money off of money.” Investors must share profits with lenders, and there must be a real asset tied to the investment — in the case of the Dubai World subsidiary in the most trouble a unit called Nakheel, that asset is real estate.Ali was kind enough to take us through Islamic finance and describe the climate in Dubai right now.

[continued] Islamic Finance Practices Face Their First Test With Dubai World Debt.