Sudan has postponed the shutdown of pipelines carrying oil from South Sudan for two weeks to allow more time to end a row over alleged rebel support, an official said on Friday in a last-minute effort to keep vital crude exports flowing.
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Sudan, the sole conduit for South Sudan’s oil exports, said last month it would close two cross-border oil pipelines by Aug. 7 unless Juba gave up support for rebels operating across their border. South Sudan denies the claims.
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“Sudan has agreed to postpone for two weeks the deadline at the request of [African Union mediator Thabo] Mbeki,” Rahmatullah Osman, undersecretary in the foreign ministry, told Reuters. The AU had asked for the extension to have more time to investigate complaints about rebel support, he said.
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Ethiopia, which is mediating between the former civil war foes with the AU, had initially announced the postponement. Mbeki had met Sudan’s President Omar Hassan al-Bashir on Thursday.
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The African Union has stepped up efforts earlier this week to prevent the production shutdown by naming three generals to investigate Sudanese allegations that South Sudan is supporting anti-Khartoum rebels.
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South Sudan has denied the claim and accuses Sudan of backing rebels in its Jonglei state.
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The generals travelled to Khartoum on Tuesday and are set to visit Juba soon as part of a six-week mission.
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South Sudan, which seceded from Sudan in 2011, depends on oil exports for its government budget, and diplomats worry that a shutdown could undermine its stability.
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Closure of the pipelines would also hit the economy of Sudan, which needs South Sudan’s payment of oil transit fees.
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Ethiopia had hosted previous two-year talks between the two foes, which culminated in the signing of deals in September to restart oil exports and demarcate their border. [Read More]
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Source: VOA News: War and Conflict
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