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U.S. Bankruptcy Court approves agreement to settle US$1.6 billion Baha Mar legal dispute

Ben Blaschke by Ben Blaschke
Wed 3 Dec 2025 at 06:06
China Construction America to appeal Baha Mar decision, accuses former partner of seeking “secret bankruptcy”

Baha Mar

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The U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New Jersey has approved a comprehensive agreement between entities of Baha Mar general contractor China Construction America, Inc (CCA) and the property’s original owner BML Properties Ltd, according to information provided to IAG by CCA.

The approval follows an earlier announcement regarding the agreement, which will see BML and its owner Sarkis Izmirlian drop all claims in the US and the Bahamas against the trio and their affiliates.

CCA, a subsidiary of Chinese state-owned developer China State Construction Engineering, was last year ordered to pay US$1.6 billion to BML Properties after being found by a New York court to have committed “many acts of fraud” in assuming control of Baha Mar in 2016.

The CCA entities filed an appeal in November 2024 before filing for chapter 11 bankruptcy a month later – a move it says was pursued in parallel to protect the interests of the co-defendants’ stakeholders. The company’s appeal was dismissed in April of this year.

“We are pleased that the Court has approved this resolution, which enables us to focus exclusively on our strategy for delivering world-class construction projects and hospitality operations to our customers worldwide,” said Yan Wei, Chairman & CEO of CCA. “We are grateful for the steadfast support of our customers, team and partners as we move forward to embrace future opportunities.”

The dispute between BML Properties and the CCA entities revolved around BML’s assertion that the entities breached an Investors’ Agreement by failing to meet construction deadlines and forcing the collapse of the project in order to enrich itself and ensure Chinese interests claimed control.

Izmirlian had, during the global financial crisis, sought funding to realize his vision for Baha Mar and found success to the tune of US$2.45 billion through China’s Exim Bank. However, the bank also stipulated that CCA must be general contractor and with the right to import up to 8,000 Chinese construction workers, providing in the process a significant boost to China’s domestic economy. On top of Exim Bank’s contribution, CCA chipped in US$150 million and BML Properties US$845 million.

The resort had initially been slated to open in December 2014, but after missing the opening and a series of later dates throughout 2015, BML filed for bankruptcy in June 2015 while blaming CCA for allegedly deliberate poor craftmanship. Baha Mar was said to be 97% complete at that point.

It was also reported at the time that CCA employees had been found smuggling computers and documents – some alleged to acknowledge substandard work – from project offices.

While Izmirlian had hoped to retain control and bring in a different contractor, the Bahamian government – which saw Baha Mar as a key national project – had other ideas and the property was instead handed over to a liquidator. Construction ultimately halted for more than a year before the government announced it had reached a deal with CCA to resume construction while it looked for a buyer.

Hong Kong jewelry giant Chow Tai Fook, whose controlling Cheng family has long held close ties with Beijing, was ultimately revealed to be that buyer at an undisclosed price although rumors circulating at the time suggested the acquisition came at a massive discount.

Chow Tai Fook Enterprises also holds interests in Australia’s Star Entertainment Group and Vietnam’s Hoiana, and has historical links to Macau concessionaire SJM via chairman Henry Cheng’s 10% stake in STDM.

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Tags: Baha MarBahamasBML PropertiesChina Construction AmericaNorth America
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Ben Blaschke

Ben Blaschke

A former sports journalist in Sydney, Australia, Ben has been Managing Editor of Inside Asian Gaming since early 2016. He played a leading role in developing and launching IAG Breakfast Briefing in April 2017 and oversees as well as being a key contributor to all of IAG’s editorial pursuits.

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