"These
inconsistencies, unless resolved, may lead to increased political conflict
between federal and regional governments that risk exacerbating clan divisions
and therefore threaten peace and security," the experts group said.
Western commercial Oil exploration in
disputed areas of Somalia
and discrepancies over which authorities can issue licenses to companies could
spark further conflict in the African nation, U.N. monitors warned in a
confidential report.
In the U.N. Monitoring
Group's latest annual report to the Security Council's sanctions committee on Somalia and
Eritrea, the experts said the Somali constitution gives considerable autonomy
to regional governments to enter commercial Oil deals.
But a petroleum law that
has not yet been adopted by the country's parliament but is being invoked by
federal officials in the capital Mogadishu says that the central government can
distribute natural resources.
"These
inconsistencies, unless resolved, may lead to increased political conflict
between federal and regional governments that risk exacerbating clan divisions
and therefore threaten peace and security," the experts group said in an
annex to its annual report, which was seen by Reuters.
The overthrow of a
dictator in 1991 plunged Somalia into
two decades of violent turmoil, first at the
hands of clan warlords, while two semi-autonomous regions - Puntland and
Somaliland - have cropped up in northern Somalia.
Around a dozen companies,
including many multinational Oil and gas majors,
had licenses to explore Somalia before
1991, but since then Somaliland and Puntland and other regional authorities
have granted their own licences for the same blocks.
In some cases Somaliland
and Puntland have awarded licenses for blocks that overlap. The experts said
one such case involves Norwegian Oil firm DNO and
Canadian-listed Africa Oil Corp.
"Potentially, it
means that exploration operations in these blocks, conducted by both DNO and
Africa Oil under
the protection of regional security forces, its allied militia or private
forces, could generate new conflict between Somaliland and Puntland," the
report said.
"It is alarming that
regional security forces and armed groups may clash to protect and further
Western-based Oil
companies interests," it said.
"In this case, the
involvement of a Norwegian company on one side and of a
Swedish-owned/Canada-based company on the other, is even more disturbing,
considering the long-standing implication of Norway and Sweden in promoting
peace and dialogue in Somalia,"
the experts said.
Bjorn Dale, DNO's acting
president/managing director and general counsel, said he was not familiar with
the U.N. experts' recent report but said that the company would never engage in
activities that threatened peace in Somaliland.
Africa Oil was not
immediately available for comment.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST?
Somalia is
struggling to rebuild after decades of conflict and a U.N.-backed African Union
peacekeeping force is trying to drive out al Shabaab. Piracy off the Somali
coast is also a problem.
The U.N. experts also
expressed concern about a clash between a longstanding bid by Norway to urge Somalia to
implement an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off its coast with commercial
interests by a Norwegian Oil company.
Under the U.N. Convention
of the Law of the Sea, an EEZ would allow Somalia 12
nautical miles of territorial control with claim to sovereign rights to
explore, exploit, conserve and manage natural resources that exist within 200
nautical miles.
The U.N. convention then
requires Somalia
to negotiate a maritime boundary with Kenya, which the U.N. experts said could
lead to several disputed Oil exploration
blocks being deemed to be in Kenyan waters.
The U.N. report said late
last year that Kenya had suspended StatOil's license for
block L26 because the Norwegian company did not want to spend money on
exploration while there was the legal uncertainty over the maritime border with
Somalia.
A Kenyan government
official told the U.N. experts that StatOil had expressed
an interest to develop the area should a boundary be agreed with Somalia and the
L26 block was deemed to be in Kenyan waters.
"Efforts by Norway to
lobby Somali officials to adopt the EEZ now coincide with current Norwegian interest
in the fate of L26 as well as with Norwegian involvement in the application of
a Special Financing Facility donor fund of $30 million which has been allocated
under the management of (Somali government) officials with a track record of
corruption," the report said.
The experts suggested that
Norway's development assistance to Somalia could
be used "as a cover for its commercial interests there," a claim it
said Norwegian International Development Minister Heikki Eidsvoll Holmas has
denied.
Norway's U.N. mission did
not immediately respond to a request for further comment.
Source: worldbulletin.net
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