By Peg Brickley 

The financial woes of Brazil's embattled OAS Group have sparked an international bankruptcy duel and sent bondholders to a New York court for aid.

Investors owed $943 million fear they won't get fair treatment from the Brazilian court overseeing the construction company's debt restructuring. On Tuesday, they will ask a bankruptcy judge in New York to acknowledge an insolvency proceeding they launched in the British Virgin Islands as the proper forum to work out the fate of OAS's international bond debt.

The construction giant filed for bankruptcy protection in Brazil after being accused by prosecutors of charging inflated fees on contracts involving that country's national oil company, Petróleo Brasileiro SA, or Petrobras. OAS says it will sell assets to pay down its debts and preserve its construction business.

The company couldn't immediately be reached Tuesday to discuss the corruption allegations or the new action brewing in New York, where Brazilian insolvency administrators and officials appointed by a British Virgin Islands court are preparing to face off over OAS Finance, a financing shell company.

OAS is moving ahead with a turnaround effort in Brazil, over the objections of some investors. In a news release earlier this year, OAS reported its victory in a Brazilian court fight with the "'vulture' Aurelius, a North American fund renowned for speculating with bonds traded in the secondary market." Aurelius Capital Management, which owns OAS bonds, unsuccessfully challenged a ruling that wrapped the financing unit into the Brazilian insolvency proceeding. An Aurelius representative wasn't immediately available for comment on Tuesday.

Bondholders say OAS Finance is a British Virgin Islands company, owed more than $1 billion by Brazilian units of OAS. Its interests are likely to be overlooked as OAS tries to hold its business together, the bondholders contend. They have petitioned a court in the British Virgin Islands to oversee OAS Finance's affairs.

Meanwhile, a representative of OAS's Brazilian insolvency proceeding has asked a New York bankruptcy court to recognize the Brazilian restructuring action as the main forum for the company's workout. A hearing on that request is scheduled for Tuesday.

Monday evening, officials appointed in OAS Finance's British Virgin Islands insolvency proceeding said they want to be heard at Tuesday's session, to make their case for separate treatment for the unit OAS used to raise money internationally. A lawyer representing the Brazilian representative in the New York action couldn't immediately be reached for comment Tuesday.

Both the Brazilian representatives of OAS Group and the British Virgin Islands-appointed liquidators for OAS Finance have filed chapter 15 bankruptcy petitions in the New York court. Chapter 15 is a form of bankruptcy designed to shield U.S. assets of distressed companies while they work out their financial problems in courts elsewhere.

OAS Finance is a shell company that funneled the proceeds of bond issues to operating OAS Group units. Investors say they haven't been able to get answers to questions about restructuring transactions OAS engaged in after it ran into trouble with Brazilian authorities concerning the alleged corruption.

(Dow Jones Daily Bankruptcy Review covers news about distressed companies and those under bankruptcy protection. Go to http://dbr.dowjones.com)

Write to Peg Brickley at peg.brickley@wsj.com

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