The company had been awarded the money by the High Court in Leeds on May 7, 2008, after finding that Dhanjal was liable to indemnify it under the terms of a contract they had entered into in October 1999. They pointed out the application was an attempt by the company that operates the camp to have a “fifth bite at the cherry”. Cosmos then moved to the High Court in the UK to recover the money and was awarded Sh42,423,134. The High Court agreed with Dhanjal in June 2011 that the judgement could not be enforced because it had not been registered in Kenya. Cosmos then returned to the High Court on February 24, 2012 to have the decision by the Queen’s Bench Division of the High Court of Justice in Leeds registered.
Source: Standard Digital May 27, 2020 18:01 UTC