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Inna Apalkova, Vladimira Dobrovolska, Yuliia Pavlova, Svitlana Yakymchuk y Volodymyr Yarmaki
Force majeure as grounds for exemption from liability: International approach and Ukrainian
experience in terms of the military conict
5. Anti-terrorist operation and war in Ukraine
as force majeure circumstances
In Ukraine, the concept of force majeure is dened in the Law of
Ukraine “On Chambers of Commerce and Industry in Ukraine” (Verkhovna
Rada, 1998). According to the specied Law, force majeure circumstances
are extraordinary and unavoidable circumstances that objectively make it
impossible to fulll the obligations stipulated in the terms of the contract or
obligations under legislative and other regulatory acts.
Among such circumstances are mentioned: threat of war, armed conict
or serious threat of such conict, including but not limited to enemy
attacks, blockades, military embargoes, actions of a foreign enemy, general
military mobilization, military actions, declared and undeclared war, acts of
a public enemy, disturbance, acts of terrorism, sabotage, piracy, disorder,
invasion, blockade, revolution, mutiny, uprising, mass riots, introduction
of curfew, quarantine established by the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine,
expropriation, forced seizure, seizure of enterprises, requisition, public
demonstration, strike, accident, illegal actions of third parties, re,
explosion, long interruptions in the operation of transport, regulated by
the terms of relevant decisions and acts of state authorities, closure of sea
straits, embargo, prohibition (restriction) of export/import, etc.
Circumstances qualied as force majeure also cover the ones caused
by exceptional weather conditions and natural disasters, namely: epidemic,
strong storm, cyclone, hurricane, tornado, ood, accumulation of snow, ice,
hail, frost, freezing of the sea, straits, ports, passes, earthquake, lightning,
re, drought, subsidence and landslide, other natural disasters, etc. (Nekit,
2021).
Therefore, terrorist acts, armed conicts and wars are recognized as
force majeure in Ukraine.
However, the analysis of judicial practice in Ukraine leads to the
conclusion that the anti-terrorist operation, which lasted in Ukraine from
2014 until the start of a full-scale war, was not always recognized as force
majeure. In some cases when, in connection with hostilities, citizens faced
the problem of returning loans or bank deposits, entrepreneurs carrying
out economic activities in areas where hostilities were or are being waged
could not fulll their contractual obligations, pay taxes, submit reporting,
some citizens still cannot receive compensation from insurance companies
for lost property, and at the same time, such cases were often justied by
the occurrence of force majeure circumstances.
Such situations are possible because in order to conrm the presence
of force majeure, it is necessary to obtain the opinion of the Chamber
of Commerce and Industry of Ukraine (a special body that conrms the