Safety Services: News for Oil & Gas and Hydrocarbon Industries  Membership Services »
Gulf Oil and Gas grow your business
Home News Events Projects Tenders Unconventionals Community | My Account Gulfoilandgas rss feed Follow us on Facebook  Jobs 
Products and vendors Services and providers Oil & Gas Software and publications

South Sudan Refuses to Withdraw Troops from Oilfield

Source: BBC News 4/12/2012, Location: Africa

Share |

The President of South Sudan, Salva Kiir, has said he will not withdraw his troops from the Heglig oilfield on its disputed border with Sudan. Speaking in parliament, Mr Kiir defied calls from the UN and African Union to pull out troops, after days of clashes. He urged MPs to mobilise their supporters and prepare for war should Khartoum refuse to talks. Meanwhile, South Sudan's army spokesman told the BBC Sudanese aircraft had bombed two towns, killing one person. The fighting along the oil-rich border region is the worst since South Sudan gained independence last July.

The UN Security Council has expressed its "deep and growing alarm" over the "escalating conflict", which it said threatened to return the countries to full-scale war. The council demanded a complete and immediate end to all fighting, and for all forces to pull back 10 kilometres from their shared border.

Speaking in Geneva earlier, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he was gravely concerned about the situation and urged both governments to "cease hostilities immediately" and hold a presidential summit to negotiate a solution. He said: "War would only compound the already considerable sufferings of the people of Sudan and South Sudan. "What is required is a political will and political leadership at the moment of need. This crisis requires the full and urgent attention of the international community."

On Wednesday, Sudan admitted that South Sudan had seized the town of Heglig, which is home to facilities that account for around half of Sudan's oil production.

The area is internationally recognised as Sudanese territory, but South Sudan disputes this. South Sudan says it took Heglig in order to prevent the Sudanese army organising attacks from there. In response, Sudan ordered a general military mobilisation and has vowed to act with "all means" against the attack. It has also pulled out of African Union-led negotiations with South Sudan.

In parliament in South Sudan's capital, Juba, on Thursday, Mr Kiir said he told Mr Ban: "I'm not under your command" and that although he did not want war with Khartoum, his country had to act in self-defence. "I always say we will not take the people of South Sudan back to war, but if we are being aggressed [attacked] like this we will have to defend ourselves," he said. "I am appealing to the citizens of the Republic of Sudan, especially the mothers, not to allow their children to be dragged into a meaningless war."

He said he had also warned Mr Ban that if Sudanese troops did not withdraw from Abyei, another disputed border area occupied by Sudan last May, "we are going to reconsider our position and we are going to head to Abyei." The president, a former rebel commander, said that MPs, who are returning to their constituencies for a parliamentary recess, must mobilise all their "people" and tell them to forget "tribal conflicts" and unite to confront a more pressing danger. "If they have guns, if the youth have the guns, let them keep these guns so that if we call them to come... [they can] confront what is coming from the north," he said. "Anybody having a gun can come with his or her gun - the rest who do not have, we will come and provide them."

The BBC's Nyambura Wambugu in Juba said parliamentarians responded with cheers, the chanting of the ruling party slogans and war songs used during the two-decade civil war. MPs do not necessarily want war but were happy that the president reflected the anger many in South Sudan feel about the months of Sudanese bombardments, she says.

In Khartoum, Sudan's leader Omar al-Bashir said war was "not in the interests of either South Sudan or Sudan". "Our brothers in South Sudan have chosen the path of war, implementing plans dictated by foreign parties who supported them during the civil war," AFP news agency quotes him as saying. Earlier in the day, Sudanese aircraft dropped five bombs on a bridge linking Bentiu and neighbouring Rubkotna, in Unity state, leaving at least one person dead and four injured, according to South Sudan officials. "This is an indiscriminate bombing by Sudan's armed forces that has been conducted for almost one year now. They are bombing innocent civilians in northern parts of Unity state," army spokesman Col Philip Aguer told the BBC.

On Wednesday, the African Union said it was deeply alarmed by the clashes, and called on both sides to exercise the utmost restraint. In a statement, the AU urged both countries to resolve this and all other outstanding issues "in a peaceful way in accordance with the overriding principle of establishing two viable states in Sudan and South Sudan". Correspondents say Sudan, having lost most of its oil when the south seceded, will not tolerate losing any more.

Unrest in MENA - The New Oil Order

Safety Services News in Sudan >>

QPI and Total Seal a Strategic Partnership in Congo
Congo >>  5/22/2013 - Qatar Petroleum International (QPI) and Total are pleased to announce the signing of a framework of Agreement whereby QPI will participate in Total E&...
Chariot Extends First Renewal Phase, Offshore Namibia
Namibia >>  5/22/2013 - Chariot Oil & Gas has announced that the Ministry of Mines and Energy in Namibia has granted a one year extension for the First Renewal Phase on the C...

Oceaneering Announces Burullus Phase IXa Contract
Egypt >>  5/20/2013 - Oceaneering International, Inc. announced that it has secured a contract from Saipem to supply umbilicals for the Burullus West Delta Deep Marine Phas...
Launching the 4th Tanzania Bidding Round in October 2013
Tanzania >>  5/19/2013 - The Government of the United Republic of Tanzania through Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) is pleased to announce the 4th Tanzania De...

Total Buys Shell's Retail Network in Egypt
Egypt >>  5/15/2013 - French oil company Total SA Wednesday confirmed it acquired Royal Dutch Shell PLC's fuel retail network in Egypt as part of its strategy to strengthen...
Mashreq to Build Fuel Terminal on the Suez Canal
Egypt >>  5/13/2013 - Citadel Capital, the leading investment company in Africa and the Middle East, announced today that core platform company Mashreq Petroleum has signed...



Related Categories: Ecological & Environmental  Emissions Measuring  Environment Management, Consultancy  Environmental Services  General  Hazardous Waste Management  Oil Spill & Emergency Response  Safety Services  Waste Disposal 

Related Articles: Ecological & Environmental  Emissions Measuring  Environment Management, Consultancy  Environmental Services  General  Oil Spill & Emergency Response  Safety Services  Waste Disposal 


Sudan Oil & Gas 1 >>  2 | 3 |



More News

Oil & Gas Projects in Sudan >>

Oil & Gas Companies in Sudan >>

Related Links

Countries Quick Links

AO BJ CD CG CI CM DZ EG ET GA GH GN GQ KE LR LY MA MG ML MR MZ NA NE NG RW SD SL SN SO ST TD TN TZ UG ZA ZM
Gulf Oil and Gas E-Marketplace - Promote your Business - About Us
Copyright © Universal Solutions All rights reserved. Privacy Policy. - Contact Us