Argentina to nationalize Spanish-controlled oil company
President Cristina Fernandez announced Monday the immediate takeover of YPF, a unit of Spanish oil major Repsol, and said she will ask the Argentine Congress to approve the expropriation of 51 percent of the Latin American country's leading oil and gas producer.
A senior official of the Planning Ministry arrived at YPF's Buenos Aires headquarters just minutes after the president's comments during a nationally broadcast event, sources at the originally state-owned firm told EFE.
Roberto Baratta, until now the government's sole representative on the YPF board, presented a list of directors who are to be removed and ordered changes to the building's security, the sources said.
The Argentine central government will hold 51 percent of the expropriated YPF shares, with the rest to be distributed among the provincial administrations, Fernandez said.
YPF has come under escalating official criticism for fuel shortages, a drop in oil and gas output and inadequate investment.
"Continuing the policy of asset stripping, with no production and no exploration, effectively would have turned us into an unviable country, not from lack of resources, but from business policies," the president said Monday.
Repsol currently holds 57.43 percent of YPF, while Argentina's Grupo Petersen has a 25.46 percent stake.
The Argentine government has 0.02 percent of YPF's shares, though the terms of the firm's 1999 privatization gave officials a veto and a seat on the board. The remaining 17.09 percent of the company's shares are traded on the Buenos Aires and New York stock exchanges.
The Buenos Aires exchange suspended trading in YPF around midday Monday. The company's shares plunged 18 percent in New York after Fernandez's announcement, though they recouped some of that loss before the NYSE also suspended trading in the firm.
YPF has seen its market value fall by roughly $11 billion since January, when the Argentine government began ratcheting up its rhetoric against the 90-year-old firm.
Argentina's valuation tribunal will determine a price for the YPF shares that are to be expropriated, the government said Monday.
Spain warned Argentina last Friday that Madrid would defend its interests in the event of the nationalization of YPF.
"I hope this government doesn't have to take (measures in response to a takeover of YPF), but undoubtedly if it has to do so it will," Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said at a press conference.
She said Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's government "has been working intensively" behind the scenes on the matter since January.
In the wake of Monday's announcement in Buenos Aires, sources in Rajoy's office said his administration was weighing an "appropriate response" to protect Spanish interests.
YPF, one of the world's first vertically integrated oil companies, was among the numerous Argentine state-owned enterprises privatized in the 1990s under President Carlos Menem.
--IANS/EFE
rd
Comments
More Pakistan News
RSS-
Pakistan could host Ireland cricket team
Ireland has given hope of reviving international cricket in Pakistan after it reportedly agreed to consider visiting the country to reciprocate Pakistan's one-day international (ODI) tour of Ireland. At a time when all the Test playing nations have written-off touring Pakistan, the International Cricket Council's (ICC) associate member Cricket Ireland (CI) gave a positive response on that ...
-
Growing intolerance in Pak-occupied Kashmir
On February 17, 2013, 25-year-old Muhammad Ali Murtaza from Aghaar, Kotli, the son of a Kashmiri Imam of a masjid in Lahore, was brutally tortured and killed by the Pakistani Army. His crime? He was visiting his cousin sister's home in a village in District Kotli near the LOC. Before he could reach her home, he was picked up by the Pakistan Army from Chattar and handed over to the ISI. That ...
-
Pakistani daily hopes Sharif Kayani work together
A leading Pakistani daily Monday hoped that incoming prime minister Nawaz Sharif and army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani "can at least be expected to try and work together". Nawaz Sharif, who is all set to become the prime minister for the third time, had a long meeting in Lahore with General Kayani. "Of one meeting is not made a relationship, functional or otherwise...," said an editorial ...
-
US-based Pak filmmaker calls for ban on Hollywood Bollywood movies to save failing Pak film industry
An US-based Pakistani filmmaker has urged on a ban on Bollywood and Hollywood movies in Pakistan, and has offered his guidance and support to save the deteoriating Pakistani film industry. Urging the government to make efforts in the revival of the large screen by encouraging independent filmmakers and movies on social issues, Mumtaz Hassan said that it can be possible only by imposing a ban ...
-
Karzai Seeks Indian Military Aid Amid Tensions with Pakistan
KABUL Afghan President Hamid Karzai plans to discuss potential arms deals with Indian officials during a trip to New Delhi this week, officials said, at a time when tensions are running high on Afghanistan's disputed border with Pakistan. Kabul's overtures to New Delhi are likely to rile Islamabad where a new government led by two-time prime minister Nawaz Sharif is set to take office ...
-
Pakistans Sharif supports Taliban peace talks
ISLAMABAD (AFP) - Pakistan's incoming prime minister Nawaz Sharif on Monday threw his support behind peace talks with the country's Taliban insurgents, saying it would be a top priority for his new government."If Taliban have offered us an option to have dialogue then we should take it seriously," Sharif said while addressing his party's newly elected parliamentarians in ...
-
Imran Khan holds London-based rival responsible for Pakistani politicians murder – video
Imran Khan 'holds responsible' London-based MQM leader Altaf Hussain of the murder of Zahra Hussain, vice-president for Khan's party. The female politician was gunned down outside her home in Karachi on Saturday, sparking outcry among supporters of Khan's party, PTI, who claim Hussain threatened its supporters in a speech from London. A spokesman for MQM has accused Khan of ...
-
Minorities Unsafe in Pakistan
Pakistan’s founder "Quaid-i-Azam" Mohammad Ali Jinnah dreamt of a country that would be Islamic and at the same time secular. The basic ideals behind the creation of Pakistan underscored security, welfare and cooperation of the people of all religions. Thanks to extremism and radicalization, today Pakistan is counted among the most dangerous places to live. Unfortunately, ...
-
Pakistani women faced major hurdles at polls
Pakistani women were often blocked from voting in recent elections, but many were compelled to vote, usually for their husband's or father's ...
-
Pakistans Musharraf Granted Bail in Bhutto Murder Case
A Pakistani court has granted bail to former military ruler Pervez Musharraf in a case related to the murder of former prime minister Benazir ...
-
Pakistan vows to be Asian tiger
(MENAFN - Khaleej Times) Pakistan's prime minister-in-waiting Mohammad Nawaz Sharif has vowed to turn Pakistan into an Asian tiger in a short span of time.Intensely pro-business Sharif, is Prime Minister for the third time - a rare event in Pakistan where political charms wash off quickly. His strength - a majority in the National Assembly which he won on the strength of his 1990s ...
-
How Coca-Cola Used Vending Machines To Try To Unite The People Of India And Pakistan
Specially-designed Small World Machines placed in both countries in March served as live communications portals. Now, Coke has released a video that allows everyone to witness the joyous ...
-
Kayani praises Pakistanis for standing up to terrorists
Army chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani on Monday praised the people of Pakistan for standing up to terrorists and defying their "unfounded dictates" during the historic general elections, saying their actions reflected their commitment to moderation and rule of law. "In these elections, people of Pakistan not only courageously withstood the threat of terrorism, they also defied ...
-
Former Pakistani Ruler Musharraf Granted Bail
ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN -- A Pakistani court on Monday granted bail to former army chief and president Pervez Musharraf who has been under house arrest on charges of failing to provide adequate security for former prime minister Benazir Bhutto before her 2007 assassination. Musharraf, who took power in a 1999 coup, returned to Pakistan in March to contest a May 11 general election after nearly ...
-
US says Pakistan curbing explosive fertilizers
ISLAMABAD -; Pakistan has taken a number of steps to prevent fertilizers made within its borders for agriculture from being used as explosives in roadside bombs that target American troops in Afghanistan, said a top U.S. military officer ...
-
Pakistans presumptive PM calls for Taliban talks
The Taliban has been waging a bloody insurgency against the government for years that has killed thousands of security personnel and ...
-
Pakistan Energy Crisis Immediate Attention Needed
In Pakistan, depending on your place of residing, there is no electricity from six to twenty hours a day. Whereas it has hit hard the lives of the common man, making it impossible to function on a day to day basis, it has also brought down production in industrial sectors drastically, costing contracts and jobs of millions across the country. If we look at the issue- two reasons emerge. First ...
-
FSB prevents terror act in Moscow by militants trained in Afghanistan Pakistan
Russia's FSB has foiled a terror attack in Moscow as they managed to kill two and detain one of the militants planning it, the National Anti-Terrorism Committee said. The three men are "Russian citizens, arrived from Afghani-Pakistani region, where they have been trained," the committee said in a statement. As FSB forces approached the house in a small town in the Moscow ...
-
US Pakistan moves to curb dangerous fertilizers
ISLAMABAD -; A top American military officer says Pakistan has taken steps to prevent fertilizers made in Pakistan from being used for roadside bombs targeting American troops in ...
-
Don’t wear socks hot Pakistanis told
Islamabad - Pakistan has told civil servants not to wear socks as the country turns off air-conditioners amid a chronic power crisis and soaring ...
-
Will U.S. Designate Egypt Pakistan Iraq and Nigeria As Religious Freedom Violators
Pakistani Christians protest against the country's blasphemy laws and violence targeting their minority community. An independent U.S. watchdog has urged the executive branch every year since 2002 to designate Pakistan as a "country of particular concern" over religious freedom violations. (AP Photo) (CNSNews.com) - As the State Department prepares to release its annual report on ...
-
Pakistans former military ruler Musharraf granted bail
A judge granted bail to Pakistan's former military ruler on Monday in a case related to the assassination of ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, his lawyer ...










Comments
No comments yet for this story
Have your say