PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd – South Sudan

"We the willing, led by the unknowing, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful. We have done so much, with so little, for so long, we are now qualified to do anything, with nothing" By Konstantin Josef Jireček, a Czech historian, diplomat and slavist.

South Sudan In Talks With Texas Pipeline Company – Report

By Jenny Gross
 Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES 

LONDON (Dow Jones)–South Sudan said Wednesday that it was in talks with a pipeline construction company based in Texas that would start constructing a pipeline in six months, according to the News Agency of South Sudan.

The news agency report, posted on the South Sudan government website, did not name the company. Dr. Barnaba Marial Benjamin, spokesman for South Sudan, also said that South Sudan had signed a memorandum of understand with Ethiopia to construct an oil pipeline passing through Djibouti, the news agency reported.

He said that South Sudanese ministries should expect trims in their budgets after a meeting of ministers scheduled to take place this weekend, the agency reported.

South Sudan, which produces 350,000 barrels of oil per day, shut down its oil production last month after negotiations over oil transit fees with Sudan ended without agreement.

-By Jenny Gross, Dow Jones Newswires; 4420-7842-9239; jenny.gross@dowjones.com

http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20120208-713592.html

South Sudan Businesses Fear Oil Shutdown Fallout

South Sudanese express their support as President Salva Kiir declared a halt on all oil operations in South Sudan, in Juba, January 23, 2012.

Photo: Reuters
South Sudanese express their support as President Salva Kiir declared a halt on all oil operations in South Sudan, in Juba, January 23, 2012.

When South Sudan decided to shut down its oil production to protest against alleged injustices from the north, the country was also cutting off 98 percent of its revenue.  Businessmen in the south are particularly concerned about the economic consequences of the shutdown.

Mustafa Ayoo runs a small hardware store at the Jebel market on the outskirts of the capital. Like many other business owners here, he has been closely following news of the oil shutdown, a two-week process begun late last month which should be nearing completion.

“Well, I’m concerned for sure, because it’s like even foreign exchange is going to be a problem,” said Ayoo. “Because mostly here the things we sell are coming from another country – mostly from Uganda and Kenya.  Here I’m sure it’s going to affect my business.”

Ayoo says he typically buys his materials using U.S. dollars. But the dollar and other foreign currencies that had been brought into the country through the oil trade are getting harder to find since the shutdown.

South Sudan’s central bank, trying to conserve dollar reserves, has ordered that wire transfers to Kenya and Uganda be conducted using only the South Sudanese pound.

Michael Toma, originally from Uganda, has been selling household goods at the Jebel market for the past year.

“Yeah, I’m so concerned in that I believe it’s already has impact as of now. Though we are worried if the impacts are going to be a long term impact definitely we the common man will have to suffer,” said Toma. “But however, I overheard the president say ‘it’s for the better’ and in hearing what he said I have reason to believe that he was right in ordering the shutdown of the oil. It’s affecting us, right, but we believe its a better decision for the future.”

North-South Sudan oil pipeline

VOA – E. Pfotzer

North-South Sudan oil pipeline

South Sudan depends on northern pipelines to send its oil to international markets. The south cut off its oil trade with the north after accusing Sudan of stealing $815 million worth of oil. Khartoum says it took the oil to compensate for unpaid transit fees.

An African Union panel led by former South African President Thabo Mbeki put forward a proposal to settle the dispute in which South Sudan would pay the north some $5 billion over the next five years to make up for the lost revenue.

South Sudan rejected the proposal. Toma says he supports that decision.

“I believe in that, because given the provisions that were drafted by the AU and trying to peruse through them I have the feeling that South Sudan as a nation was being cheated,” said Toma. “Its sovereignty was being tampered with and it was being reduced [from] an independent country to a dependent country.”

South Sudan also faces enormous development challenges. The United Nations estimates that only a quarter of the population is literate and about the same percentage has access to health care.

Some traders, like Dayo King, think the nation may still be too fragile to sacrifice so much of its economy.

“This is still a country that has just begun, in fact was trying to do development just from the start, so if there’s no oil maybe when the oil even stops maybe like one week it affects people terribly,” King said.

Others like Simon Gatdier Yieh support South Sudan at all costs.  Having witnessed years of war, Yieh says the south, as an independent nation, is in the right to stand up to Khartoum.

“The people of the Arab side like Omar al-Bashir they’ve not forgotten the war; it’s not good,” said Yieh. “So we’re very happy for our president to shutdown the oil because oil belongs to the south. It does not belong to the north.

The government of South Sudan is preparing to announce austerity measures to reduce spending in order to make up for the economic shortfall.

But with so many people in the country lacking basic services, and many others kept alive through emergency humanitarian interventions, any significant cuts could be painful.

South Sudan Businesses Fear Oil Shutdown Fallout
Voice of America
February 08, 2012 South Sudan Businesses Fear Oil Shutdown Fallout Gabe Joselow | Juba, South Sudan When South Sudan decided to shut down its oil production to protest against alleged injustices from the north, the country was also cutting off 98

South Sudan on road to football recognit
FOXSports.com
South Sudan will be proposed as a member of the Confederation of African Football on Friday as it begins the process to become world football’s newest nation. CAF says the state’s newly formed football federation will be considered for membership at

SUDAN-SOUTH SUDAN: Pressgangs “still operating in Khartoum”
IRINnews.org
JUBA-KHARTOUM, 8 February 2012 (IRIN) – Rebel groups fighting South Sudan’s government have bolstered their ranks through the forced recruitment of southerners living in Khartoum, according to a senior official in Juba, a self-styled rebel leader,

South Sudan on road to joining world football
Reuters Africa
By Mark Gleeson LIBREVILLE (Reuters) – South Sudan will become a provisional member of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) on Friday, the first step to becoming the world’s newest footballing nation. But the country, which broke away from Sudan

 UN: Hunger Crisis Worsening in South Sudan
Voice of America (blog)
The United Nations says ongoing conflict and a weak harvest in South Sudan have put millions of people on the brink of a severe hunger crisis. A joint report released Wednesday by the World Food Program (WFP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization

Exclusive: Trafigura deals in disputed Sudanese oil
Reuters
By Emma Farge | GENEVA (Reuters) – Swiss-based commodities trader Trafigura has bought oil which the South Sudanese government claims was seized by Sudan, its northern neighbor and former civil war foe, industry sources told Reuters, and is now in a

High levels of food insecurity in South Sudan / FAO-WFP report says poor
StarAfrica.com
ROME, Italy, February 8, 2012/African Press Organization (APO)/ — Millions of people in South Sudan will face hunger this year if urgent action is not taken, according to a joint report issued by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United

Khartoum warns of reaction to any aggression by South Sudan
Sudan Tribune
February 7, 2012 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudanese government has vowed to respond in kind if South Sudaninitiates any hostile action, in the latest escalation of rhetoric between the two countries as they prepare to embark on a fresh round of talks.

South Sudan Limits Dollar Export to Uganda, Kenya
AllAfrica.com
By Machel Amos, 8 February 2012 The Central Bank of South Sudan has directed foreign exchange bureaus to effect transactions to Uganda and Kenya in the local currency as it attempts to reserve the available dollars in stock following the shutdown in

Former Lucknowite to gain experience in South Sudan
Lucknow Sentinel
Jen MacKinnon and her OPP colleague Rob Baskey at the Canadian Police College in Ottawa where the two trained before going to the Sudan in Africa. MacKinnon is mentoring the Sudanese police officers and training them on South Sudan Law pertaining to

Ethiopia, South Sudan, Djibouti Talk Infrastructure, Integration
SomalilandPress
ADDIS ABABA — Ethiopian Finance Minister Sufian Ahmed inked a Memorandum of Understanding last week with his Djibouti counterpart Elias Dawaleh Mussa and South Sudan’s Minister of Petroleum and Mines, Stephen Dhieu Dau, in the Ethiopian capital…

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