Home page | News    Monday 13 December 2010

“Don’t panic" Machar tells oil workers from North Sudan

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December 12, 2010 (JUBA) – Northern Sudanese working in the oil-producing south should not panic as the south’s referendum on independence approaches region Vice President, Riek Machar has told oil workers on December 6.

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Sudan’s Vice President Ali Osman Taha and his southern counter part Riek Machar co-chairing a meeting on future of post-referendum oil operations in Falluj, South Sudan. Dec. 6, 2010 (ST)

“Don’t panic as referendum vote nears,” Machar told hundreds of northern staff at Falluj oilfield in southern Sudan.

Northerners working at various oilfields in the South have reported fears about the outcome of the referendum scheduled to take place three weeks from now on 9 January 2010. Some have opted to resign from work and move north while others have taken sick leave a travelled to northern Sudan.

There has also been a large migration of Southern Sudanese from the capital Khartoum and other areas of the north as their safety and citizenship status in the north remains unclear.

Machar assured the northern Sudanese employees working at Petrodar Operating Company in Melut County in Upper Nile state of his government’s policy to make sure that the oil operations continue uninterrupted irrespective of the referendum result.

He said the oil operations benefit both north and south economically, explaining that any slightest interruption for even a day or two can have negative impact on the economies of both regions.

Machar further assured that the Government of Southern Sudan has an obligation to protect economic institutions in Southern Sudan including oil company installations and employees working in the oilfields such as in Upper Nile and Unity states, situated on the south’s border with the north.

The Vice President who also spent two days at Falluj oilfield met with the senior management of the Petrodar Operating Company and told them to extend services such as water, electricity and roads to the populations of Melut County.

In a public rally in Melut town Machar advised the citizens of the area to build good relations with the employees working at the oilfields while claiming their right to provision of services in a peaceful manner.

He said the people of Melut had the right to benefit from the oil produced and operated in their land. Machar also briefed them on the ongoing discussions between the two governments to resolve the issue.

An agreement was later on reached at Falluj oilfield between the Government of Southern Sudan and the national government in Khartoum on the security of the employees and signed by their Sudanese defense minister and his southern counterpart in the presence of Machar and the Vice President of the Republic, Ali Osman Mohamed Taha.

The joint meeting was also attended by national and southern the interior ministers as well as ministers of petroleum in Khartoum, Lual Achuek and minister of Energy and Mining, Garang Ding.

The agreement also called on the Petrodar Operating Company to deliver services to the people in the area and train qualified Southern Sudanese to be employed in the oil sector.

Southern Sudan’s budget is almost solely dependent on oil revenues produced in the South. Only 2% of the southern government’s budget does not come from the regions oil revenues, which are split 50-50 between the north and south as part the same peace deal that established the upcoming secession referendum.

Whether this split continues in the event that the south separates from the north is one of the post-referendum issues being debated between the signatories to the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement.

The only oil refineries pipeline runs through northern Sudan to Port Sudan on the Red Sea.

An agreement on future oil revenues may include the north receiving a percentage of the revenue and or fees for the oil being exported and refined through the north.

Oil is one of many issues under negotiation between the Khartoum government and the South Sudan’s former rebels the SPLM, who have governed the south since the 2005 peace deal.

Other outstanding post-referendum issues include, debt, national assets, water, citizenship, demarcating the border and implementing a separate referendum in the border region of Abyei to determine whether it will join, what most believe, will be a newly-independent south.

(ST)

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  • 13 December 2010 05:09, by Victory

    Dr machar:

    let them go forever without coming back, we dont need their service anymore sinc today there is more southerns who are educated in the oil eng &science ,southernas are capable of supervising everything in this centry..May God bless south sudan.

    Reply to this message

    • 13 December 2010 05:56, by Shadrack Nuer Machut

      Let Oil workers from North Sudan continue panicking. There is no mercy to say don’t panic.
      I doubt everybody from Khartoum.

      Reply to this message

    • 13 December 2010 08:07, by Diu J.Kuek

      Dr Riek Machar is right to tells the oil workers from the North Sudan not to be panic.yes there is political strategy to be follows or may be adopt by GOSS;We the Southerners have decided to say good by to our brothers in North.
      So to guarantee the rights and security of Northerners working at the various oilfields in the South Sudan its obligation of the Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS); but for the Northerners it doesn,t mean to work forever we are so carefully in our political strategy base on mutual interests and the interests of our people who are living in the North.
      Wherebefores;
      their assets and their properties need to be secures through well political plans and the Southerners who are living in Khartoum most of them are be put behind bars by Islamist extremes through minors cases.

      for us to come out from these critical issues it need our Government policy to go slowly.
      To you guys wharever you need must be done as we can not forget the passed.
      let’s pull out from Khartoum first and get our people who been behind bars thereafter we can do as much as we want.
      By Diu J.Kuek

      Reply to this message

      • 13 December 2010 19:53, by LL Reuben

        Dr. Machar is following the footsteps of late Dr. Garang folks, which is good because humanity has to be respected on any given situation. Just because the South will split from the North does not translate to never having mutual relationship afterall. So, Northerners should be treated fair, just like we Southerners would treat ourselves and there is nothting wrong with that gentlemnen.

        Cheers,
        long live the vision that recognizes equality, justice and freedom for all.

        Reply to this message

      • 14 December 2010 03:49, by Agutran

        The oil workers will not panic at all; the only guys that will panic are the corrupt millionaires in Khartoum, because they’re the ones who have a lot to lose.

        The underprivileged workers will find their new bosses in the South to hire them easily.

        Reply to this message

  • 13 December 2010 06:40, by timeriel

    Let them panic and move to the north for good. we will employed our south sudanese to replace them. I,m really tired of arabs

    Reply to this message

  • 13 December 2010 09:05, by Nhomlawda

    The northerners in the oil fields in South Sudan know why they are worried about Southerners attacking them. Their government had used brutal intelligent services and millitary to unleash terror on Southerners around oil fields without considering their rights to security as people of the Sudan. The northerners in oil fields in the South had been living large while their fellow Southerners in the area were left to wallow in abject poverty while food was just being thrown away by northerners in the oil fields without even giving the surplus to vulnerable members of the society living in poverty near them. The Khartoum government had been sending northern students to Malaysia, China, Russia, UK, USA, and other countries to study petroleums and related courses while never educating the southerners whose oil fields are being exploited. The northern politicians and their merchants are enjoying cash of the oild in the south in their lavish Khartoum villas while unleasing fire on Southerners in the oil fields and finally, the billigerent regime in Khartoum is still threatening Southerners with smoke across the South if the South decided to say enough is enough on all these abuses of human rights and decide their destiny to have a new country.
    Those reasons plus others are valid reasons for sensible engineers to be worried. Therefore, the answer to their worries is to persuade their billigerent regime to acknowledge attrocities committed in the South and respect the will of the people of the South before adding more fuels into already tense feeling against northerners in the South. Without this recognition, they should be assured of maximum terror to be unleased by Southerners on those facilities.

    Reply to this message

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