Geological studies and surveys proved
that there are “abundant” quantities of oil in the western region of
Darfur, Sudan’s Energy and Mining Ministry said. Energy and Mining
Minister, Awad Ahmed al-Jazz, said that the newly discovered oil field
is expected to generate 500,000 barrels of crude oil per day by August
this year. Mohamed Siddig, a spokesman for the energy ministry also
announced that drilling for oil has started in Darfur “on the basis of
the geological studies and surveys which proved the presence of oil in
abundant quantities in Darfur," Siddig said the ABCO consortium, in
which the Swiss company Cliveden has a 37 percent share, owned the
rights to the field. Currently Sudan exports around 300,000 oil barrels
per day. The country’s main oil fields are in the south, where rebels
launched an uprising against the Sudanese government, demanding a
greater share in the country’s natural resources. In January, both
parties signed a peace treaty in Nairobi, Kenya, ending more than 20
years of civil war in the south. Under the accord, 50% of oil revenues
from southern oil fields will go to the Sudan People’s Liberation
Army/Movement (SPLA/M), while Khartoum takes the other half. [more]
A
former Marine Capt., who recently spent six months in Sudan's Darfur,
discusses the violence in the region he captured through a camera lens.
[here]
Photos- Darfurians in Sudanese Camps Courtesy of International Rescue Committee. Hi-res [here]
Pictured above: The
few animals that refugees have brought with them are dying from lack of
fodder and water around Bahai. The International Rescue Committee has
organized a program to collect and burn carcasses to prevent the spread
of disease. [more]
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