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Re: فشل محادثات البشير وسالفا بخصوص النفط بعد انسحاب الاخير من المفاوض (Re: Mohamed Suleiman)
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شكرا اخ محمد سليمان، الرئيس سالفا كير يبدو انه غسل يديه تماما من قضية النفط ما لم تحل جميع المشاكل العالقة بهذا الملف علي طريقته هو، ويبدو هذا واضحا في العرض الذي قدمه وفد ج السودان من قبل، باقان اموم كان شديد اللهجة في تعاطيه مع هذا الملف حيث قال في ما معناه ان لا عودة لضخ النفط نحو الشمال ما لم يسترد الجنوب حقوقه من اللصوص(ديلي نيشين الكينية). كينيا دورها لعبت هذا الملف بطريقة قردية عجائبية، حيث اصدر برلمانها مذكرة تدعم الجنائية الدولية ربما يستشف منها فتح باب غرام وغزل مع جوبا، لذلك كان توقيع اتفاق لتحويل ضخ النفط عن طريق كينيا عوضا عن بورتسودان وشمال السودان.
الكينيون لديهم معلومات من زمان ان الطبعية الجيوغرافية لنفط جنوب السودان انسب لكينيا وعن طريق كينيا، لذلك الكينيون الان يعدون انفسهم ليس بتسطيح الارض لنفط الجنوب السوداني كي يمر عن طريقهم بل ان يكونوا هم شركاء اساسيين في نفط الجنوب وبمعونة تكنلوجية غربية. اقراء هذا الكلام تحت في الديلي نيشين الكينية:
Kenya urged to mediate Sudan oil row Share Bookmark Print Email Rating A soldier stands next to the infrastructure of a field processing facility in Unity State, South Sudan. Photo/AFP
A soldier stands next to the infrastructure of a field processing facility in Unity State, South Sudan. Photo/AFP By LUCAS BARASA [email protected] Posted Sunday, January 22 2012 at 10:31
Kenya has been urged to intervene and help resolve a row over oil pipeline pitting the two Sudans.
A petroleum geologist based in Boston, Massachusetts, Mr Samuel Karanja said the intervention is for the good of Kenya's strategic interests.
“Kenya should now provide a technical and diplomatic support between Sudan and South Sudan in the dispute associated with the use of the present export infrastructure to move oil from south Sudan to the international markets,” Mr Karanja said.
The geologist said Kenya has the “strategic and moral authority to get South Sudan on the negotiating table while it can encourage Sudan to open its pipeline and port infrastructure to South Sudan to recover its cost on the built up infrastructure.”
“At the same time, with this involvement, Kenya will access vital strategic information on the oil fields in South Sudan that will be useful when the South eventually builds the pipeline through Kenya and when it becomes the main supplier of oil to East Africa as is likely to be the case in the future,” the geologist said.
Mr Karanja said it will be useful if Kenya could acquire the geologic and play types of the producing fields in the South Sudan as this could in turn prove invaluable to the Kenya’s geologists in the exploration of petroleum in Turkana and Anza basins, which have similar geologic basin architecture and sedimentary play types.
“These data has hitherto been kept confidential by the international oil companies operating in South Sudan,” Mr Karanja said.
Kenya has strategic interests with the two countries and South Sudan will increasingly rely on Kenya as it develops its infrastructure and trade with the outside world. Share This Story 12Share
Kenya played a critical role in the peace accord between the South Sudan and the North.
On Friday, South Sudan shut down its oil pipeline that runs through the Sudan to the export terminal along the Red Sea coast worsening tensions between the two countries.
The closure followed South Sudan’s persistent oil row with Sudan.
The Council of Ministers in a sitting chaired by President Salva Kiir directed the Petroleum and Mining minister Stephen Dhieu Dau to execute the decision immediately, Information minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin said.
The decision comes in the wake of deteriorating relations with Sudan, with South Sudan accusing her northern neighbour of stealing its oil destined to potential buyers overseas and constructing a secret pipeline to divert her oil.
Over 75 per cent of the crude oil Sudan exported before its split in July last year came from fields in the south, but most of the infrastructure has been in the north.
South Sudan became Africa’s newest nation in July under a 2005 peace deal that ended decades of civil war between north and south, but many issues remain unresolved, including oil, debt and violence on both sides of the poorly-defined border.
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