KAMPALA, June 7 (Reuters) - Oil imports to East and southern Africa’s COMESA trade bloc are set to rocket to $15 billion this year as world oil prices hit record highs, Sudan’s president Omar el Bashir said on Monday.
Bashir, outgoing chairman of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), said the 2004 oil bill for the group’s 20 member states had shot up from $9 billion in 2003.
"This will have far-reaching negative effects on our economies," he told delegates at the organisation’s annual summit in the Ugandan capital Kampala.
"Coupled with low commodity prices, this will increase some COMESA region countries’ debt stock," he said. "They will now have to borrow more just to service their current debts."
Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni took over from Bashir as COMESA chairman at the opening of Monday’s meeting, which attracted several heads of state and regional officials.








Are Arabs evil simply because they are Arabs?
Tuesday 9 February 2010
By Zechariah Manyok Biar February 8, 2010 — The struggle for freedom is a complicated thing. Oppressed people who struggle for freedom can sometimes turn oppressors if they are not careful in the (...)
When did the SPLM turn separatist?
Monday 8 February 2010
By Charles B. Kisanga February 7, 2010 — In their desperate attempt to mislead Southern opinion, Salva Kiir and the clique around him are going around claiming that they are the champions of the (...)
Maintain Arman candidacy for Sudanese presidency
Sunday 7 February 2010
By Koang Tut Jing February 6, 2010 — The National Congress Party’s latest political maneuvering must not blindfolds the SPLM from looking outside the box. The endorsement of Kiir by the NCP (...)
/Barticles>