- Anglo-lranian Oil Co. (United Kingdom v. Iran)
The Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. (United Kingdom v. Iran) case was a dispute between the
UK andIran , in which the UK alleged that the Iranian Oil Nationalization act of 1951 was counter to a convention agreed upon by the (then) Anglo-Persian Oil Co. (now British Petroleum) and the Imperial Government of Persia (now Iran) in 1933, which granted the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. a 60-year license to mine oil in convert|100000|sqmi|km2 of Iran in return for a percentage royalty.On
26 May 1951 , the UK took Iran to theInternational Court of Justice , demanding that the 1933 agreement be upheld and that Iran pay damages and compensation for disrupting the UK-incorporated company's profits.On
22 July 1952 , the ICJ decided, due to the fact that Iran had only conceded to ICJ jurisdiction in cases involving treaties agreed upon after 1932, and as the only treaty cited by the UK after that date was between Iran and a foreign company (and not the UK itself), that it had no jurisdiction in this matter (Iran's original contention).ee also
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Anglo-Iranian_Oil_Company#Anglo-Iranian_Oil_Dispute External links
* [http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/index.php?p1=3&p2=3&k=cd&case=16 International Court of Justice records of this case]
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