Hussein Haeri#11790

Hussein Haeri , KC

Hussein Haeri KC is a partner at Withers in London where he leads the firm's public international law group and co-heads the firm's international arbitration group. He also jointly leads Withers' Middle East special interest group.  

Hussein has extensive experience of working on international legal and dispute resolution matters in London, Paris, New York and South Africa for almost 20 years. He has worked as counsel and advocate on arbitrations under all the major rules, including ICSID, UNCITRAL, LCIA, ICC, SCC and SIAC Rules, as well as in ad hoc arbitrations. His clients include governments, multinational corporations and international organisations. He has served as counsel in State-State proceedings before the International Court of Justice and in national courts, including the courts of England and Wales, on public international law issues. Hussein's public international law practice includes advising governments and international organisations on international investment law, constitutional and human rights matters, sovereign immunity, energy and natural resources, international humanitarian law, sanctions, the law of the sea and treaty and legislation drafting.  

Hussein is recognised as a leading lawyer for public international law and international arbitration by all the major legal directories. Chambers and Partners notes that Hussein "has an outstanding analytical ability" and Chambers Global refers to him as "an outstanding lawyer, combining a great attention to detail with a view of the big picture". Legal 500 states that "the practical and solutions driven Haeri is outstanding" and that "he combines huge intellectual powers with great client handling and gives straight-to-the-point advice". 

In 2024, Hussein was appointed King's Counsel (the only Solicitor-Advocate to take Silk in that year). He is also a Solicitor-Advocate of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (BVI). In addition to his work as counsel, Hussein also sits as an arbitrator. Hussein is also a Senior Fellow on International Investment Law at SOAS, University of London and a Member of the Faculty at the University of Rome, Roma Tre University, Certificate Course in International Commercial and Investment Arbitration.  

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2008

Year Taken Silk

  • 2024

Qualifications

  • LLM (Distinction), International Business Law (2006)
  • B.A. Hons 1st Class Honours, Political Science, IDS, Economics, (2002)
  • Solicitor of England and Wales (2008)
  • Solicitor Advocate of England and Wales (2016)
  • Solicitor-Advocate Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (BVI) (2020)
  • King's Counsel (2024)

Education

  • London School of Economics, (2006)
  • McGill University, (2002)

1 Contributions by Hussein Haeri

Arbitration in the British Virgin Islands: Legislation, Court Assistance, Confidentiality, Enforcement (New York Convention/ICSID), Interim Relief, Insolvency, State Immunity and the BVI International Arbitration Centre
PRACTICE NOTES
Arbitration in the British Virgin Islands: Legislation, Court Assistance, Confidentiality, Enforcement (New York Convention/ICSID), Interim Relief, Insolvency, State Immunity and the BVI International Arbitration Centre
Introduction This Practice Note aims to present a succinct outline of the arbitration environment in the Territory of the Virgin Islands (the ‘BVI’). For background purposes, the BVI is a British Overseas Territory. It possesses its own constitution (the Virgin Islands Constitution Order 2007, which superseded the Virgin Islands Constitution Order 1976), its own legislature, which is responsible for enacting laws, and its own distinct system of government. UK law forms part of BVI law where it is expressly received into local law or where it constitutes an element of the common law (Common Law Declaration of Application Act (Cap 13), section 2). Note: the cases mentioned below are reported by LexisNexis® The legislative framework The BVI’s first arbitration statute was the Arbitration Act 1976 (the ‘1976 Act’). The 1976 Act was not amended or updated following its original enactment and remained comparatively narrow in scope and detail overall...
Arbitration
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