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Somali Officials Deny Selling Oil Rights

Issue 290
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Presidential Memo
Declares
Election Commission As
“Office Holders Of The State”

Bomb explosion kills owner of Horn Afrik Radio in Mogadishu

Gunmen kill a prominent local journalist in Mogadishu

Three Somali journalists killed by Ethiopian-backed forces

Letter To The President Rayale: Arrests In Somaliland

Ethiopia threatens Shabelle Media Network

Analyst Says Puntland Crisis Could Further Destabilize Horn of Africa

Somali Parliament Debates Oil Law This Week - Envoy

Heavy Fighting Breaks Out In Mogadishu

Somali Officials Deny Selling Oil Rights

Diaspora Partnership Programme: Now Eligible For All Somalis With EU Nationality

Regional Affairs

IFJ Condemns “Savage Killings” as Wave of Attacks in Somalia Claims Media Victims

Amnesty International Petitions Somaliland Over Opposition Arrest

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Two More Victims Identified

In Africa, A Poisonous Standoff

Failed State Index Ranks Moldova As Worst In Europe

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Ex-Ottawa newsman killed

Traversing Savage Waves

Money Transfer Measures Raise Concerns

Ethiopia: Zenawi Confronts The Ogaden Provocation

Neo Warfare

Top US Concern In Africa: The Ogaden Human Right Committee Report

Food for thought

Opinions

Fire Hazard In Somaliland

Riyalism Dictatorship Has No Place in Somaliland

Rayale And Reptiles: What Have They Got In Common

Today The Justice Of The Nation Of Somaliland Will Prevail

A Reality Check On Rayale’s Somaliland

CHANGE OF THE OLD GUARD AND THE ELECTABILITY FACTOR!

There’s Something About Vanity Fair


Somali PM Ali Mohamed Gedi, left, listens to his special advisor Daniel Bourzat before giving a press conference on the final day of AU summit in Accra (File Photo)
Somali PM Ali Mohamed Gedi, left, listens to his special advisor Daniel Bourzat before giving a press conference on the final day of AU summit in Accra (File Photo)

By Nick Wadhams

Nairobi, August 08, 2007 – Officials with Somalia's transitional government are promising not to begin searching for oil until after parliament adopts a new petroleum law and their shattered country achieves peace. But as Nick Wadhams reports from Nairobi, new evidence suggests they are looking to carve up oil rights.

Last month, the Financial Times reported that President Abdillahi Yusuf had awarded   Prime Minister Gedi and his staff are promising not to sign any deals until a natural resources law is enacted. Parliament is scheduled to consider the bill this week.

Somalia 's ambassador to Kenya, Mohamed Ali Nur, denies there is a split within the Somali government. He tells VOA that officials understand peace must come to the turbulent country before exploration begins.

"I do not believe that any deals have been signed and even the one by the Chinese company I think the prime minister gave an interview to a news agency saying that it is annulled and he was not aware of it and nothing can be signed until the law is passed," said Nur.   "The reports that we have been getting from different sources is that we have a lot of resources we can explore, but peace should come first."

The priority that officials are putting on oil, despite Somalia's turbulence, is another sign that many African leaders are looking to oil to jump-start their economies.

Neighboring Ethiopia's battle with a rebel group in the east is believed to be partly the result of its desire to protect what it believes are natural resources there. The rebel group, the Ogaden National Liberation Front, has warned oil companies to stay away, and killed 74 people in a raid on a Chinese-run oil facility in April.

Oil experts say the previous estimates about Somalia's small reserves are based on outdated technology. Dianne Sutherland, the editor of Petroleum Africa magazine, says Somali officials have quietly been laying the groundwork for a potential oil boom.

"Until they actually get in there and start utilizing this new technology to have a new look, you do not really know. Oil exploration will definitely get underway in Somalia. 'When?', is the question. They have already signed quite a few contracts with various smaller independent exploration companies," said Sutherland.

Any new concessions will no doubt raise questions for the companies that had exploration rights in Somalia before the 1991 civil war began.

Source: VOA


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