Our Expert in Bangladesh
No results available
Understanding how to obtain interim relief for arbitration in Bangladesh is critical for any party facing the risk of asset dissipation, evidence destruction, or irreparable harm before an arbitral tribunal can be constituted or a final award rendered. The Arbitration Act, 2001 (Act No. I of 2001) provides two parallel routes: applying to the Bangladeshi courts for an interim injunction, or requesting emergency interim measures through an arbitral tribunal or emergency arbitrator appointed under institutional rules. Each route carries distinct procedural requirements, timelines, and enforcement implications, and the choice between them has become more consequential in 2026 following institutional rule updates and evolving court practice.
This guide sets out the complete step-by-step process for both routes, the documents needed, realistic timelines, estimated costs, and the common pitfalls that cause applications to fail.
Interim relief in the arbitration context refers to urgent, temporary measures designed to preserve the subject matter of a dispute, protect a party’s rights, or prevent conduct that would render a future arbitral award meaningless. Under the Arbitration Act, 2001, interim measures serve to safeguard the integrity of the arbitration process itself, ensuring that the eventual award is not reduced to, in practical terms, a paper judgment of no real value.
The most common forms of interim relief sought in Bangladesh include asset-freezing orders, injunctions restraining a party from transferring or disposing of property, orders for the preservation of goods or evidence, and, in admiralty matters, the arrest of vessels. Any party to an arbitration agreement may seek these measures, whether the arbitration is domestic or international in nature.
The legal bases for interim relief are found primarily in Section 7A of the Arbitration Act, 2001 (which empowers courts to grant interim measures in aid of arbitration) and the tribunal’s own powers under the Act. For institutional arbitrations, the rules of the administering body, such as the Bangladesh International Arbitration Centre (BIAC), the ICC, or the SIAC, provide additional mechanisms, including emergency arbitrator procedures. Parties involved in arbitration proceedings in Bangladesh should assess both routes before filing.
Before a court or arbitral tribunal will grant interim measures, the applicant must satisfy several threshold tests. These requirements apply regardless of whether the application is made to the High Court Division or to an emergency arbitrator, though the evidentiary standard and procedural format differ between the two forums.
The core eligibility criteria are:
The Arbitration Act, 2001 addresses interim measures in several provisions. The arbitral tribunal’s power to order interim measures is established by the Act, which provides that, unless otherwise agreed by the parties, the tribunal may order a party to take any interim measure of protection as it considers necessary. Section 7A, inserted by amendment, empowers the court to grant interim relief even in respect of foreign-seated arbitrations. Section 42 addresses applications for setting aside arbitral awards, imposing a sixty-day limitation period from receipt of the award. Jurisdictional prerequisites also apply: the respondent must have assets, a presence, or a connection within Bangladesh sufficient to justify the court’s intervention.
There are two procedural routes available to a party seeking interim relief. Route A involves applying to the Bangladeshi courts for an interim injunction or preservation order. Route B involves requesting emergency measures from an arbitral tribunal or emergency arbitrator under institutional rules. The choice between the two depends on the factors summarised in the decision table below.
| Factor | Court Injunction (Route A) | Emergency Arbitration (Route B) |
|---|---|---|
| Enforcement power | Directly enforceable via court mechanisms (contempt, arrest) | Requires court recognition for enforcement in Bangladesh |
| Speed of appointment | No appointment needed, file directly | Emergency arbitrator appointed within 24–72 hours (institutional rules) |
| Confidentiality | Court proceedings are generally public | Proceedings are confidential under institutional rules |
| Availability pre-arbitration | Available before or during arbitration | Available only if institutional rules permit and parties have agreed |
| Neutrality concerns | Subject to domestic court procedures | Neutral, internationally appointed arbitrator |
| Best suited for | Asset arrest, vessel arrest, freezing orders requiring immediate domestic enforcement | Cross-border disputes, confidentiality-sensitive matters, where court neutrality is a concern |
A well-prepared evidence bundle is essential to the success of any interim relief application, whether filed at court or before an emergency arbitrator. Incomplete or poorly organised documentation is one of the most common reasons for applications to be delayed or refused.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Arbitration agreement / clause | Original or certified copy of the contract containing the arbitration clause; must identify the governing rules and seat |
| Underlying contract(s) | Full executed copies of all relevant agreements (sale contract, charter party, subcontract, etc.) |
| Sworn affidavit in support | Sets out the factual basis, urgency, risk of harm, and relief sought; must be sworn before a Commissioner of Oaths or Notary Public |
| Evidence of urgency / irreparable harm | Correspondence, notices, shipping schedules, bank statements, or intelligence reports demonstrating imminent asset flight or harm |
| Draft proposed order | For court applications: a draft order specifying the exact relief sought (freezing, injunction, arrest, etc.) |
| Asset / vessel particulars | Details of the assets to be preserved, for vessel arrest: vessel name, IMO number, flag, port of call, registered owner, and P&I club details |
| Security / bond valuation | Evidence supporting the quantum of the claim and the value of the security to be offered or demanded |
| Corporate authorisation | Board resolution or power of attorney authorising the signatory to file the application on behalf of the claimant entity |
| Translation and notarisation | All documents not in English or Bangla must be translated by a certified translator and notarised; foreign documents may require apostille or consular attestation |
| Payment records / invoices | Unpaid invoices, proof of payment, bank transfer confirmations supporting the underlying monetary claim |
For emergency arbitration applications filed with institutions such as the ICC or SIAC, the claimant must also include a copy of the Request for Arbitration (or confirm that one has been or will be filed simultaneously), the applicable filing fee, and a statement identifying any related court proceedings. Practitioners handling BIAC interim measures applications should confirm the current filing requirements directly with the BIAC secretariat via local counsel in Bangladesh.
Sample affidavit headings for a court application for an interim injunction in Bangladesh typically include: (i) identity and authority of the deponent; (ii) nature of the dispute and the arbitration agreement; (iii) factual background and chronology; (iv) evidence of urgency and risk of irreparable harm; (v) the specific relief sought; (vi) the applicant’s undertaking as to damages; and (vii) a statement of truth.
Speed is the defining feature of interim relief applications. The following timeline table summarises the typical durations for each stage of the process under both routes. These are indicative ranges based on practitioner experience; actual timelines vary depending on the complexity of the case, court listings, and institutional workload.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Urgent triage and instruct local counsel | Claimant / in-house counsel | 0–24 hours |
| Evidence bundle preparation | Claimant and local counsel | 24–72 hours |
| File court application (Route A) | Local counsel at High Court Division | Same day if urgent; otherwise 24–72 hours |
| Ex parte hearing and court order (Route A) | Court | 24–72 hours from filing |
| Inter partes hearing (Route A) | Court | 7–14 days after ex parte order |
| File emergency arbitrator request (Route B) | Claimant via institution (ICC / SIAC / BIAC) | Same day as decision to proceed |
| Emergency arbitrator appointment (Route B) | Institution registrar / secretariat | 24–72 hours from receipt of compliant application |
| Emergency arbitrator order or award (Route B) | Emergency arbitrator | 7–14 days from appointment (varies by institutional rules) |
| Enforcement of order (either route) | Local counsel / enforcement authority | 1–7 days after order, depending on enforcement logistics |
Critical deadlines to note: under Section 42 of the Arbitration Act, 2001, an application to set aside an arbitral award (other than an international commercial arbitration award) must be filed within sixty days from the date of receipt of the award. While this relates to final awards rather than interim orders, it illustrates the strict limitation periods imposed by the Act. Parties must also comply with any deadlines imposed by the court or emergency arbitrator for filing responsive submissions or providing security.
Cost planning is essential, particularly for international claimants unfamiliar with Bangladeshi court practice. The following table provides indicative cost estimates. All amounts are approximate and subject to change; parties should confirm current fee schedules with local counsel before filing.
| Item | Estimated Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (ad valorem) | Varies by claim value; modest by international standards | Calculated as a percentage of the claimed amount under the Court Fees Act, 1870 (as amended) |
| Security / bond (court-ordered) | Typically 10–25% of claim value (court’s discretion) | Court may require bank guarantee, fixed deposit receipt, or cash deposit as security for damages |
| Local counsel fees, urgent interim application | Varies; typically agreed on a fixed-fee or hourly basis | Higher for urgent, same-day filings; separate fees for inter partes hearings |
| Emergency arbitrator institution fee (ICC) | USD 40,000 (approximate, per ICC schedule) | Covers institution administration and emergency arbitrator remuneration; non-refundable |
| Emergency arbitrator institution fee (SIAC) | SGD 25,000–50,000 (approximate, per SIAC schedule) | Subject to current SIAC fee schedule; varies by complexity |
| BIAC filing and administration fee | As per current BIAC fee schedule | Confirm directly with BIAC secretariat; generally lower than ICC/SIAC |
| Translation and notarisation | BDT 5,000–50,000 per document (estimate) | Depends on document length and language combination |
| Enforcement costs | Additional court fees and counsel fees | Required if emergency arbitrator order must be recognised and enforced through Bangladeshi courts |
VAT at the applicable rate may be charged on legal services in Bangladesh. P&I clubs and liability insurers frequently cover or advance the costs of urgent interim relief applications where the claim falls within the scope of the insured cover. Early engagement with insurers is advisable to confirm funding and avoid delays.
Several developments in 2025–2026 have materially affected how parties obtain interim relief for arbitration in Bangladesh. Practitioners must account for these changes when deciding between court vs emergency arbitration and when preparing applications.
Securing interim relief promptly can determine whether a final arbitral award has real commercial value or remains unenforceable. Parties facing urgent circumstances should instruct experienced arbitration counsel in Bangladesh without delay, assemble a complete evidence bundle, and make a clear, early decision between the court route and emergency arbitration based on the decision factors set out in this guide. The procedural requirements are strict, the timelines are tight, and the consequences of delay or procedural error are significant.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Suhan Khan, FCIArb at ACCORD CHAMBERS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message