Thursday, 9 February 2012 at 10:34, Reuters, Dubai

Chris O'Donnell had sued Nakheel for $3.7 million in lost incentives and entitlement fees. (REUTERS)
Nakheel's former chief executive won a lawsuit for breach of contract against the indebted developer on Thursday and was awarded $3 million in damages by a Dubai court.
Chris O'Donnell, who left Nakheel last June after five years as chief executive, had sued the developer for $3.7m in lost incentives, entitlement fees, interest, exchange rate losses and salary-related claims.
He also sought a business class airline ticket from Dubai to Australia.
The Dubai World special tribunal rejected the interest and airfare claims but awarded O'Donnell $3m for long-term incentive payments.
An additional amount of about Dh916,000 ($249,400) was also awarded for lieu days during his stint.
O'Donnell was heading Dubai's flagship firm when a collapse in property prices forced Nakheel into a $16 billion restructuring. The company wrote down over $21bn in property assets.
O'Donnell's annual salary amounted to around Dh4.8m during this time, the court heard in one of its earlier sessions.
"Whilst I have been entirely vindicated by the Dubai World Tribunal, I am naturally disappointed that ... the matter was not able to be resolved amicably without the need to take costly legal proceedings that vented Nakheel's internal business in a public forum," O'Donnell said in a statement after the verdict.
Nakheel's lawyers said the case should have been first brought to the ministry of labour but considered rejection of certain additional costs as "a good result."
Nakheel, the ambitious developer behind palm shaped man-made islands, was at the center of Dubai's 2009 debt crisis when it was owned by flagship conglomerate Dubai World. The government took over Nakheel in 2011 as part of Dubai World's $25bn debt restructuring agreement with banks.
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