Mar 23, 2017 (Jonglei Times)-A $500mn oil-exploration deal in South Sudan has sparked a vicious escalation in violence, after a faction of South Sudanese rebels (SPLA-IO) captured four oil workers in the country's north.A spokesperson for the SPLA-IO told Jonglei Times they would not accept any oil drilling in their territory until after fighting had ended - accusing the government of prolonging the civil war with its oil revenues.
"We
repeatedly warned the company and international workers in the oilfield
to leave immediately before their lives fell into risk," said William
Gatjiath Deng.
Nigeria's
Oranto Petroleum secured the deal, gaining exploration rights to a
25,150 square kilometre area of Upper Nile State referred to as Block
B3, on March 6.
"We believe the petroleum resources of Block B3 are vast," said South Sudan's Minister of Petroleum Ezekiel Lol Gatkuoth.
The area
in question is not fully under the government's control however - as
rebel fighters have been engaged in some of the country's most bitter
fighting there for months.
In response to Oranto's announcement, the SPLA-IO ordered "all national and international oil workers to immediately leave and evacuate" the oil fields in South Sudan.
In response to Oranto's announcement, the SPLA-IO ordered "all national and international oil workers to immediately leave and evacuate" the oil fields in South Sudan.
"The
brutal and ruthless regime in Juba is using billions of US dollars
generated from the oil production and sale for purchasing more lethal
arms," the rebels said in a statement.
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"The history of conflict and mass
atrocities in Sudan and South Sudan is driven in large part by unchecked
greed, manifesting itself primarily in the accumulation of wealth and
power by the country's leaders," reads a new report by the Enough Project, a human rights NGO.
A famine was declared in parts of South Sudan on February 20. This was later attributed almost entirely to the government and its continued violence against its own citizens.
The Enough Project's new report,
titled "How the world's newest country went awry", documents how the
country's war-lords directly profit from massive government projects -
feeding the money straight back into the sale of arms.
"The competing kleptocratic
factions are fighting over a lucrative prize: control of the state,
which in turn brings control over oil and other natural resource
revenues."
South Sudan derives 97 percent of
its budget revenue from sales of oil, according to a UN panel of
experts. From late March to late October 2016, oil revenues totalled
about $243 million.
This money is largely used to invest in weapons for the country's army - accused of rampant war-crimes and potential genocide by a recent UN report.
This money is largely used to invest in weapons for the country's army - accused of rampant war-crimes and potential genocide by a recent UN report.
Yet despite frequent and repeated
warnings coming from NGOs and independent inspectors, foreign investors
routinely return to invest in Juba.
In February, the king of Morocco promised to pay $5 million for a project to relocate the country capital to a new area further central South Sudan.
A representative for the Joint
Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (JMEC), the organization
responsible for monitoring the country's peace agreement, did not
respond to a request for comment.
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or redistributed. The New Arab news agency contributed to this report.
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