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Frozen in Paradise: Mauritius' Power to Sanction Without UN Listings – How One Company Fought Back and Won [PART 2]

08/10/2025

What Happened in 2025 to Overturn the 2023 Decision in OLA Energy Holdings Ltd v Financial Intelligence Unit.

Overview of the 2023 Decision:

  1. In the 2023 case (OLA Energy Holdings Ltd & Ors v The Financial Intelligence Unit [2023 SCJ 326]), the Supreme Court of Mauritius (Judge in Chambers) upheld a Restriction Order issued on February 28, 2023, under section 27 of the Asset Recovery Act 2011 (ARA).
  2. This order froze assets held in Mauritian banks by OLA Energy Holdings Ltd and related entities, all linked to Libyan sanctioned entities (Libya Investment Authority and Libya Africa Investment Portfolio).
  3. The FIU suspected fund diversion potentially related to terrorism financing.
  4. The applicants sought rescission, arguing the FIU usurped powers under the United Nations (Financial Prohibitions, Arms Embargo and Travel Ban) Sanctions Act 2019 (UN Sanctions Act).
  5. The Judge dismissed the application on August 18, 2023, rejecting the preliminary issue and briefly concluding the order was justified "ex facie the affidavits and supporting documents," without detailed reasoning on the merits.

The 2025 Appeal and Overturning

  1. In 2025, the Supreme Court of Mauritius heard the appeal in OLA Energy Holdings Ltd & Anor v The Financial Crimes Commission & Anor [2025 SCJ 25], decided on January 20, 2025 (with some reports citing January 17).
  2. By this time, the FIU had been replaced by the Financial Crimes Commission (FCC) under the Financial Crimes Commission Act 2023 (effective March 29, 2024), and the ARA was repealed.
  3. The appellants (OLA Energy Holdings Ltd and RascomStar-QAF) challenged the 2023 judgment on four grounds.
  4. The Court allowed the appeal, quashing the 2023 judgment and remitting the matter for fresh determination under the new FCC Act. This effectively overturned the 2023 denial of rescission.
  5. News reports indicate the sanctions were lifted following the judgment, allowing OLA Energy to resume operations without restrictions. However, the formal quashing and remittal provided the legal basis for this outcome.

Key Arguments That Led to Overturning

The appellants raised four grounds of appeal:

  1. The 2023 Judge misinterpreted their position that the preliminary issue (usurpation of UN Sanctions Act powers) would dispose of the matter, failing to consider the merits or allow submissions on them fully.[dismissed].
  2. The Judge failed to provide adequate reasons (motivation) for her merit conclusion that the Restriction Order was justified.[upheld].
  3. The Judge erred in applying the principle "generalia specialibus non derogant," ignoring overlaps between the ARA and UN Sanctions Act.[procedural flaw].
  4. The Judge overlooked that assessing fund diversion suspicions required interpreting sanctions laws, which fall under designated Judges per the UN Sanctions Act.[procedural flaw].

The Court:

  • Dismissed ground one
  • Upheld ground two as decisive.
    • It found the 2023 judgment's merits conclusion lacked "intelligible or adequate reasons," leaving parties unable to understand the basis for rejecting rescission.
    • Citing cases like GFA Insurance Ltd v Motor Vehicle Insurance Arbitration Committee [2011 SCJ 173], Flannery v Halifax Estate Agencies Ltd [2000] 1 All ER 373, and English v Emery Reimbold and Strick Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 605, the Court emphasized that judicial decisions must be adequately motivated based on facts and law, not mere "peg-words" or stereotypes.
  • Due to this procedural flaw, the Court declined to address grounds 3 and 4 on their merits.

Justified remittal rather than outright quashing without further hearing

  • The repeal of the ARA and transition to the FCC Act (section 168 deeming the order a Civil Attachment Order) justified remittal rather than outright quashing without further hearing.
  • The respondent (FCC) argued that the 2023 judgment adequately addressed the merits through extracts on FIU powers; however, the Court rejected this, noting that those extracts related only to the preliminary issue.

Evidence Presented

Evidence included:

  • Affidavits from both parties, including the FIU's May 9, 2023, affidavit (paragraphs 19-27) detailing an intelligence report on suspicious transactions linked to terrorism financing, "diversion of funds from Libya," and risk of dissipation.
  • The appellants' third affidavit (June 3, 2023) with merits averments, including UN Security Council exemptions for fund remittances.
  • Supporting documents: UNSC Resolutions (1970, 1973, 2009), Implementation Assistance Notice No. 1 (2012), FSC enquiry notifications (2020), NSC guidance, and parliamentary debates (Hansard) on the ARA and UN Sanctions Act. The Court focused on the lack of reasoned engagement with this evidence in the 2023 merits decision.

Outcome and Implications

  • The appeal was allowed, the 2023 judgment quashed, and the case remitted to the Judge in Chambers for fresh determination under the FCC Act.
  • While the freeze was not immediately lifted in the judgment (remaining subject to remittal), news reports confirm the sanctions were effectively removed post-judgment, enabling OLA Energy to resume full operations in Mauritius and across Africa without legal or regulatory restrictions.
  • This enhanced the company's administrative and financial autonomy, supporting its goals in retail fuel, aviation, wholesale, and marine services.
  • The decision underscores the importance of judicial reasoning in asset recovery cases and aligns with Mauritius' transition to the FCC framework for handling such matters.

Sources (Live Weblinks)

  1. Full 2025 Judgment PDF: https://fcc.mu/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/OLA-ENERGY-HOLDINGS-LTD-ANOR-v-FCC-ANOR-2025-SCJ-25.pdf
  2. Mauritius' Fight Against Illicit Funds (Comsure Group): https://www.comsuregroup.com/news/mauritius-fight-against-illicit-funds/
  3. Supreme Court in Mauritius Lifts Sanctions on Libyan Ola Energy (Libya Observer): https://libyaobserver.ly/news/supreme-court-mauritius-lifts-sanctions-libyan-ola-energy
  4. Mauritius High Court Lifts Sanctions on Libya’s Ola Energy (Libya Herald): https://libyaherald.com/2025/01/mauritius-high-court-lifts-sanctions-on-libyas-ola-energy/
  5. Mauritius Supreme Court Lifts Sanctions on OLA (Libya Energy): https://libyaenergy.ly/mauritius-supreme-court-lifts-sanctions-on-ola/
  6. The Supreme Court of Mauritius Lifts Sanctions on Libya's Ola Energy (Zahaf Law): https://zahaflaw.com/news/at-vero-eos-et-accusam-et-justo-duo-dolores-et-ea-rebum-stet-clita-kasd-diam-nonumy-eirmod-tempor-invidunt-ut-labore-et-dolore-mag/
  7. Mauritius Supreme Court Lifts Sanctions on Libya's "Ola Energy" (Libya Review): https://libyareview.com/52417/mauritius-supreme-court-lifts-sanctions-on-libyas-ola-energy/
  8. Full 2023 Judgment PDF: https://www.fiumauritius.org/fiu/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/ola-energy-holdings-ltd-ors-v-financial-intelligence-unit-2023-scj-326-1.pdf
  9. OLA Energy Holdings Ltd & Ors v The Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU Mauritius): https://www.fiumauritius.org/fiu/?p=4242
  10. FIU Judgements (FIU Mauritius): https://www.fiumauritius.org/fiu/?page_id=5406
  11. Mauritius Court Overturns Financial Sanctions on Ola Energy (Libyan Express): https://www.libyanexpress.com/mauritius-court-overturns-financial-sanctions-on-ola-energy/
  12. Trinity Legal LinkedIn Post on 2023 Case: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/trinity-legal-mauritius_trinity-legal-successfully-represented-the-activity-7105512757365514240-yeIZ
  13. Mauritius Under US Scrutiny for Sanction Busting (Comsure Group): http://www.comsuregroup.com/news/mauritius-under-us-scrutiny-for-sanction-busting/

READ PART ONE HERE

Frozen in Paradise: Mauritius' Power to Sanction Without UN Listings – How One Company Fought Back and Won [PART 1]

The case OLA Energy Holdings Ltd & Ors v The Financial Intelligence Unit (2023 SCJ 326) was decided by the Supreme Court of Mauritius on August 18, 2023.

Speed read:

  • Ola Energy Holdings Ltd is a subsidiary of the Libya Africa Investment Portfolio (LAIP), which in turn is owned by the Libyan Investment Authority (LIA).
  • These entities were subject to UN Security Council sanctions under UNSCRs 1970, 1973, and 2009 (2011), targeting Libyan assets due to concerns over terrorism financing and misuse of state funds.
  • In February 2023, the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) of Mauritius obtained a Restriction Order from the Supreme Court, freezing all money held in banks in Mauritius
  • The FIU suspected these funds could be linked to terrorism financing or were proceeds of crime and acted under the Asset Recovery Act (ARA).
  • The FIU did not need to prove a specific offence or charge anyone; It only required showing "reasonable grounds to believe" the property was terrorist, proceeds, a benefit, or an instrumentality.

Background on the Case

THE CASE involved an application by the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU, the Respondent) for a Restriction Order under section 27 of the Asset Recovery Act 2011 (ARA) to freeze assets held in Mauritian banks by the Applicants:

  • OLA Energy Holdings Ltd (Applicant No. 1),
  • Libya Africa Investment Portfolio (LAIP Mauritius, Applicant No. 2),
  • Rascomstar-QAF (Applicant No. 3), and
  • Libya Oil (Exploration & Production) Ltd (Applicant No. 4).

These entities are all Mauritius-based Global Business License holders, operating in sectors such as energy retail, satellite telecommunications, and oil exploration.

  • All Applicants are directly or indirectly owned or controlled by Libyan entities:
    • The Libya Africa Investment Portfolio (LAIP Libya) and
    • The Libya Investment Authority (LIA). LAIP Libya

UN-sanctioned entities YES AND NO

  • LIA were designated as "UN-sanctioned entities" under United Nations Security Council Resolutions (UNSCRs) 1970 (2011), 1973 (2011), and 2009 (2011), which imposed asset freezes due to concerns over the Libyan civil war, human rights abuses, and potential terrorism financing.
  • However, the Applicants themselves (including OLA Energy Holdings Ltd) were not directly designated as UN-sanctioned entities.
  • The UN Security Council Committee's Implementation Assistance Notice No. 1 (IAN, issued in March 2012) provided guidance on these sanctions, clarifying that subsidiaries like the Applicants might be exempt if they operate independently, but this was a point of ongoing dispute (with a separate Supreme Court case, SCR 5A/227/22, pending on this issue as of 2023).

In 2023, the FIU did not need to prove a specific offence or charge anyone.

  • This evidence was presented in the FIU's affidavits dated May 9, 2023, and July 4, 2023.
  • The court noted that under section 27(1)(b) of the ARA, the FIU did not need to prove a specific offence or charge anyone;
    • It only required showing "reasonable grounds to believe" the property was terrorist, proceeds, a benefit, or an instrumentality.

2023 FIU SUCCESS

  • The FIU obtained the Restriction Order ex parte on February 28, 2023, freezing all funds in the Applicants' Mauritian bank accounts to prevent dissipation.
  • The Applicants sought to rescind it under section 31 of the ARA, arguing it should have been pursued under the more specific United Nations (Financial Prohibitions, Arms Embargo and Travel Ban) Sanctions Act 2019 (UN Sanctions Act), which implements UN sanctions domestically in Mauritius.
  • The court dismissed the rescission application, upholding the freeze.

2025

  • In a subsequent related case, OLA Energy Holdings Ltd & Anor v Financial Crimes Commission & Anor (2025 SCJ 25), decided in January 2025, the Supreme Court lifted the restrictions, allowing OLA Energy to resume operations, but this does not retroactively affect the 2023 reasoning for the initial freeze.)
  • See COMSURE’s part 2 posting

2023 Evidence Presented for the Asset Freeze

The FIU's application was based on affidavits and supporting documents, including intelligence reports. Key evidence included:

  • Intelligence Report from FIU's Financial Intelligence Analysis Division (FIAD): An internal report submitted to the FIU's Asset Recovery Investigation Division (ARID) highlighted activities by entities, including the Applicants, potentially related to terrorism financing. This report identified "suspicious connections nationally and internationally," such as links to the UN-sanctioned LIA and LAIP Libya.
  • Suspicion of Fund Diversion: The FIU averred that there was a reasonable belief of "diversion of funds from Libya to the local bank accounts of Global Businesses" in Mauritius. This was tied to the Applicants' ownership structure, where outflows from their accounts might ultimately route back to sanctioned Libyan entities for purposes aligned with the UNSCRs (e.g., supporting activities that threaten international peace and security).
  • Risk of Asset Dissipation: The FIU emphasised the "high risk of assets being dissipated" due to the "international ramifications of the ongoing enquiry." This was supported by the Applicants' significant financial scale—e.g., OLA Energy Holdings Ltd had a turnover exceeding €5 billion in 2012 and operated in 17 African countries—raising concerns that funds could be quickly moved or hidden.
  • Ongoing Investigations: The FIU referenced prior inquiries by the Financial Services Commission (FSC) in October 2020 under section 75 of the Financial Services Act 2007, and an Investigation Order under section 44 of the same Act. These revealed potential non-compliance with sanctions. Additionally, the FIU noted that since the Applicants are "corporate emanations of the State of Libya," it was unclear if outflows were being routed back to Libya for sanctioned purposes.
  • Compliance with International Standards: The FIU cited Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Recommendations 29 and 30, which require financial intelligence units to act expeditiously in identifying, tracing, freezing, and seizing property suspected of being proceeds of crime or linked to terrorism financing. This provided contextual evidence that the freeze was a proactive measure in an ongoing probe.

In 2023, the FIU did not need to prove a specific offence or charge anyone.

  • This evidence was presented in the FIU's affidavits dated May 9, 2023, and July 4, 2023. The court noted that under section 27(1)(b) of the ARA, the FIU did not need to prove a specific offence or charge anyone.
  • It only required showing "reasonable grounds to believe" the property was terrorist, proceeds, a benefit, or an instrumentality.

Key Arguments Allowing the Freeze Despite No Direct UN Sanctions

The court's decision to uphold the freeze centred on a preliminary legal issue raised by the Applicants:

  • Whether the FIU had "misapplied" the ARA by usurping powers under section 26 of the UN Sanctions Act.
  • The Applicants argued that the freeze related to UN sanctions implementation, so it should fall under the more specific UN Sanctions Act (invoking the principle generalia specialibus non derogant—general laws do not override specific ones).
  • The court rejected this, allowing the freeze under the ARA.

Key arguments included:

  • Independence of the ARA from the UN Sanctions Act:
    • The ARA (enacted in 2011) is a general asset recovery framework aimed at recovering proceeds or instrumentalities of crime or terrorist property, even without prosecution (on a balance of probabilities).
    • Its purpose, as per parliamentary debates (Hansard, November 21, 2011), is to "reinforce the fight against crime, including transnational crime" by targeting "ill-got gains."
    • The UN Sanctions Act (enacted in 2019) implements UNSCRs domestically, including asset freezes under section 26, but only after the Secretary for Home Affairs declares a party as "designated" (e.g., listed by the UN).
    • The Applicants were not so designated, so section 26 could not be activated.
    • The court held that the two laws are not in conflict:
      • The ARA focuses on recovery based on suspicion,
      • while the UN Sanctions Act enforces pre-existing UN designations. No repeal or override applies, as per cases like Paw Chin Chiang Marie Desire Joe v Mrs Ramburn Basdeo (2003 MR 208) and Bank of Baroda v Koodaruth (2009 SCJ 292).
    • The court cited Assets Recovery Agency (Ex parte) (Jamaica) (2015 UKPC 1):
      • "Reasonable grounds for believing" do not require proof of wrongdoing, just rational reasons for suspicion.
  • FIU's Statutory Powers Under the ARA:
    • As the Enforcement Authority (per section 9 of the Financial Intelligence and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2002, or FIAMLA), the FIU has broad functions under section 10 of FIAMLA, including collecting, analysing, and disseminating information on suspected terrorism financing.
    • This empowers it to apply for Restriction Orders under ARA section 27 if there are "reasonable grounds to believe" the property is terrorist-related.
    • The court emphasised that the FIU did not "usurp" the National Sanctions Committee (NSC)'s powers under the UN Sanctions Act, as no designation had occurred.
    • The freeze was a temporary investigative tool (lasting up to 12 months, extendable to 3 years on good cause), not a permanent sanction.
  • Rejection of Generalia Specialibus Non Derogant:
    • The Applicants cited cases like Pabaroo D.T. v Varmah K.D. & Ors (2013 SCJ 197) and Vinos v Marks & Spencer plc (2001 3 All ER 784) to argue the UN Sanctions Act is "specific" for terrorism financing linked to UNSCRs.
    • The court disagreed, finding no "contradictions" or "repugnancy" between the laws (per Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes, 12th Ed.).
    • Both have distinct purposes: ARA for asset recovery; UN Sanctions Act for UN compliance.
  • Safeguards and Proportionality:
    • The ARA provides protections, like variation orders (sections 28 and 31) for essential payments, minimising prejudice.
    • The court noted the Applicants' prejudice claims but prioritised the "interests of justice" amid the ongoing probe.
  • National Interest and Broader Context:
    • The FIU argued the case involved potential terrorism financing "simpliciter" (not just UN sanctions), justifying ARA action. The court accepted this, viewing the freeze as justified at the investigative stage.

Outcome and Subsequent Developments

  1. The court dismissed the rescission application with costs, upholding the freeze. This aligns with Mauritius' efforts to combat illicit funds, as noted in FATF-compliant frameworks. However, in January 2025 (2025 SCJ 25), the Supreme Court lifted the restrictions after further review, citing insufficient ongoing evidence of wrongdoing and allowing OLA Energy (formerly OiLibya) to operate freely. This later ruling suggests the initial freeze was precautionary, but the 2023 decision focused on the FIU's threshold for suspicion under the ARA.

For full details, please refer to the attached 2023 judgment or visit the FIU's website (fiumauritius.org) for the PDF. Full 2023 Judgment PDF:

  1. https://www.fiumauritius.org/fiu/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/ola-energy-holdings-ltd-ors-v-financial-intelligence-unit-2023-scj-326-1.pdf

Sources (Live Weblinks)

  1. Full 2023 Judgment PDF: https://www.fiumauritius.org/fiu/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/ola-energy-holdings-ltd-ors-v-financial-intelligence-unit-2023-scj-326-1.pdf
  2. Mauritius' Fight Against Illicit Funds (Comsure Group): https://www.comsuregroup.com/news/mauritius-fight-against-illicit-funds/
  3. FIU Mauritius Page on the Case: https://www.fiumauritius.org/fiu/?p=4242
  4. Full 2025 Judgment PDF: https://fcc.mu/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/OLA-ENERGY-HOLDINGS-LTD-ANOR-v-FCC-ANOR-2025-SCJ-25.pdf
  5. Trinity Legal LinkedIn Post: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/trinity-legal-mauritius_trinity-legal-successfully-represented-the-activity-7105512757365514240-yeIZ
  6. The Supreme Court of Mauritius Lifts Sanctions on Libya's Ola Energy: https://zahaflaw.com/news/at-vero-eos-et-accusam-et-justo-duo-dolores-et-ea-rebum-stet-clita-kasd-diam-nonumy-eirmod-tempor-invidunt-ut-labore-et-dolore-mag/
  7. Mauritius Supreme Court Lifts Sanctions on OLA: https://libyaenergy.ly/mauritius-supreme-court-lifts-sanctions-on-ola/
  8. Supreme Court of Mauritius Lifts Sanctions on Libyan-Owned Ola: https://www.agcnewsnet.com/article/2494
  9. UN Security Council Committee on Libya Sanctions: https://main.un.org/securitycouncil/en/sanctions/1970
  10. UN Documents for Libya Resolutions: https://www.securitycouncilreport.org/un_documents_type/security-council-resolutions/?ctype=Libya&cbtype=libya
  11. UNSCR 1973 (2011): https://main.un.org/securitycouncil/en/s/res/1973-%25282011%2529
  12. SIPRI on UN Arms Embargo on Libya: https://www.sipri.org/databases/embargoes/un_arms_embargoes/libya/libya_2011
  13. Asset Recovery Act 2011 Mauritius PDF: https://mauritiuslii.org/akn/mu/act/2011/9/eng%402017-06-30/source.pdf
  14. Mauritius' Game-Changer: First Recovery Order Under ARA: https://www.comsuregroup.com/news/mauritius-game-changer-the-first-recovery-order-under-the-asset-recovery-act/
  15. Mauritius Asset Recovery Act 2011 (Africa Commons): https://africacommons.net/artifacts/20341297/mauritius-asset-recovery-act-2011/21241820/
  16. UN Sanctions Act 2019 Mauritius (Bank of Mauritius): https://www.bom.mu/about-bank/legislations/united-nations-financial-prohibitions-arms-embargo-and-travel-ban-sanctions-act-2019
  17. Implementation of Targeted Financial Sanctions (FIU Mauritius): https://www.fiumauritius.org/fiu/?page_id=2317
  18. About NSSec (National Sanctions Secretariat): https://nssec.govmu.org/Pages/About_NSSEC.aspx
  19. UN Sanctions Act 2019 PDF (FSC Mauritius): https://www.fscmauritius.org/media/77953/the-united-nations-financial-prohibitions_-arms-embargo-_-travel-ban-sanctions-act-2019.pdf
  20. Mauritius - Global Sanctions Guide (Eversheds Sutherland): https://ezine.eversheds-sutherland.com/global-sanctions-guide/mauritius?overlay=Europe

MAURITIUS SANCTIONS TERRORISM FINANCING LEGAL FIU

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