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Old 07-16-2007, 05:34 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Somali PM ‘unaware’ of Chinese oil deal.

[quote]Somali PM ‘unaware’ of Chinese oil deal
By Barney Jopson in Nairobi

Published: July 16 2007 18:36 | Last updated: July 16 2007 18:36

Somalia’s interim prime minister has sought to distance himself from a decision to grant oil exploration rights to CNOOC, indicating that the Chinese state oil giant may have become entangled in an internal power struggle within the interim government.

CNOOC and a smaller group, China International Oil and Gas, are planning to begin survey work in the Puntland province later this year – the latest example of China’s willingness to brave Africa’s most volatile regions in search of natural resources.

But Ali Mohamed Gedi, prime minister, told the Financial Times he had not seen the agreement granting the Chinese groups exploration rights. “I’m not aware of this. I don’t know anything about it,” he said in an interview in Nairobi.

He added that no valid deals could be struck until the country’s interim parliament had endorsed a new oil law due to be published in the next two months.

The FT, however, has seen a document signed by president Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, who is from Puntland, that granted two Somali officials power of attorney to sign a production-sharing agreement with CNOOC Africa and CIOG in Beijing on May 24 last year. At the time, the transitional government had little authority outside its base in Baidoa.

Last month Somalia’s energy minister met with the heads of CNOOC Africa and CIOG in Nairobi to hammer out the details of their planned survey work.

One western diplomat who follows Somalia said it would be no surprise to find the president and prime minister working independently of each other. “They don’t really get on. They’re from different clans,” he said. “They have differences and divergences, but they tolerate each other.”

CNOOC in Beijing last week declined to comment on any aspect of the deal over exploration rights.

Mr Gedi on Monday emphasised the importance of putting a national oil law in place. “There are many companies interested in exploring oil and gas in Somalia, but in order to protect the wealth of the country and the interests of the Somali people, we cannot operate without a regulatory body, without rules and regulations,” he said.

He was aware of “informal contacts” between his government and oil companies, including Chinese groups and some of the western oil groups that held exploration concessions in the 1980s.

Asked how oil groups would feel about one of their rivals striking a deal ahead of the oil law, he said: “Life is up and down. Today yes, tomorrow no. Tomorrow yes, the day after, no. But I believe those who are interested in the oil business in Somalia will be received after the petrol law is endorsed by parliament.”

In the late 1980s exploration concessions were held by companies including Conoco and Phillips, which have merged; Amoco, now part of BP; and Chevron. These groups left the country after dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was overthrown during civil war in 1991.

According to the US Energy Information Administration, Somalia has no proven oil reserves and only 200bn cubic feet of proven natural gas reserves, which have not been tapped.

But Range Resources, an oil group listed in Sydney, estimates that the Puntland province has the potential to yield 5bn-10bn barrels of oil.[/

QUOTE]

FT.com / In depth - Somali PM ‘unaware’ of Chinese oil deal

There could be only three scenarios....

The first scenario is that it could be true that Gedi has truly no idea about this Chinese deal. I am inclined to think that way as well. He is not the sharpest knife in the Kitchen, I mean he & his President had no say in the invasion & they heard about the air bombardments in their country through the media. So, it is possible that he really has no knowledge about this.

Secondly, I think Geedi is playing dumb and acting coy with the Americans here, but that’s a far fetched since he is not a man known to be independent

Third scenario, which I believe is what really happened, is that the TFG(Or Ethiopia or America, who ever calls the shots in Somalia) realized that granting an oil contract to China wasn't a smart idea. Geedi was ordered to deny the existence of such a contract in order to question the legality of the contract and thereby cancel the whole thing. America is not dumb to let China have the exploration rights while they did the dirty work, no they are not dumb sir.
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Old 07-16-2007, 06:07 PM   #2 (permalink)
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If America uses their stooges to destroy the Chinese Deal and others... tsk tsk tsk - it will be another nail in their Coffin.
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Old 07-16-2007, 06:13 PM   #3 (permalink)
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There’re plenty of young Somalis who live aboard and are keeping a close eye one what is coming on in their home country. Most of them have every intention of going back to Somalia. America and other EU or Asian countries could feast while they can, because in 5-10 years, there will be new intellectual Somalis who are going to appear, and they will not be easily fooled like our camel herding so called tribal leaders today.
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