Gina Rinehart, Australian mining heiress and the worlds richest woman, has threatened to withdraw her children’s ransom insurance as the legal battle for royalties heats up.
Rinehart, 57, has been in court with 3 of her 4 children for years for control over a trust worth a estimated AUD3 billion (£2.3b).
The legal stoush escalated last week when Rinehart lost a bid to have correspondence suppressed in which her children said they feared for their safety and that of their families as Rinehart’s wealth surged.
Rinehart is worth an estimated AUS$18 billion (£12.2) and her fortunes are set to soar as commodity prices rally, with Forbes Asia saying she could soon challenge Wal-Mart widow Christy Walton as the world’s richest woman.
Citigroup has predicted that her wealth could one day eclipse that of Carlos Slim and Bill Gates, making her the richest person in the world amid projections her wealth could top US$100 billion.
Rinehart stepped up pressure on her children Monday, demanding they agree to keep details of the legal battle private or lose their kidnapping insurance, after emails detailing their safety fears were released by the court.
“We can only presume that your clients’ previously stated concerns for the personal safety of their families and themselves have now completely and entirely disappeared,” said a letter from her lawyers published by the Australian Financial Review.
“Under these circumstances it seems that your clients would place no value in the continuation of ransom insurance that is currently provided to them and/or their young children,” the letter continued.
“Indeed you may consider such insurance to be wasteful expenditure.”
The emails released Friday by the Supreme Court revealed pleas from Rinehart’s two eldest daughters for bodyguards and greater protection for their homes, fearing kidnapping for ransom over her sizeable fortune.