(YahooNews) Exclusive: U.N. experts wary of Somaliland plan for armed oil protection unit

From: Biniam Tekle <biniamt_at_dehai.org_at_dehai.org>
Date: Fri, 30 May 2014 12:50:28 -0400

http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-u-n-experts-wary-somaliland-plan-armed-162119553--finance.html?utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=twitterfeed
Exclusive: U.N. experts wary of Somaliland plan for armed oil protection
unit

By By Michelle Nichols and Louis Charbonneau

By Michelle Nichols and Louis Charbonneau


UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - U.N. experts warn that plans by Somalia's
breakaway enclave Somaliland to deploy special forces to protect foreign
oil companies could worsen conflicts in the long unstable Horn of Africa.

A confidential May 27 letter to the U.N. Security Council sanctions
committee on Somalia and Eritrea, obtained by Reuters on Friday, recommends
the panel consider whether the planned armed unit could be viable or not.

"The deployment of an Oil Protection Unit could play into internal and
regional conflicts that appear to be brewing within Somaliland and between
Somaliland and other regional authorities, if its deployment is not handled
carefully or accompanied by mitigating measures," the coordinator of the
expert monitoring group, Jarat Chopra, wrote.

The experts, who monitor sanctions violations, said in July that Western
commercial oil exploration in disputed areas and discrepancies over which
authorities can issue licenses to companies could cause more fighting in
Somalia.

Chopra's letter repeated that "legal and constitutional discrepancies in
respect of oil licensing throughout Somalia have opened the door for
potential conflicts between the Federal Government of Somalia and regional
authorities, and between regional authorities themselves."

The overthrow of a dictator in 1991 plunged Somalia into two decades of
violence, first at the hands of clan warlords and then Islamist militants,
while two semi-autonomous regions - Puntland and Somaliland - have cropped
up in northern Somalia.

About a dozen companies, including many multinational oil and gas majors,
had licenses to explore Somalia before 1991, but since then Somaliland,
Puntland and other authorities have granted their own licenses for the same
blocks.

A petroleum law that has not yet been adopted by Somalia's parliament, but
is being invoked by federal officials in the capital Mogadishu, says the
central government can distribute natural resources.

Chopra said the Somaliland government commissioned a study into the
viability of an armed unit and told the experts "of its willingness to
abide by U.N. Security Council resolutions governing the import of military
equipment and training for any such Oil Protection Unit."

The committee would have to be notified of any such imports and could
object, Chopra said.

The Security Council imposed the embargo on Somalia in 1992 to cut the flow
of weapons to feuding warlords. The council last year partially lifted the
arms embargo, allowing Mogadishu to buy light weapons to strengthen forces
fighting Islamist groups.

Chopra wrote that the oil protection unit is unlikely to be formed for
months. The Somaliland government's study has proposed an initial force of
420 personnel, drawn from the existing police and army units.

"The mandate of the Oil Protection Unit would be to deter threats through a
credible armed presence and to defend against attacks with proportionate
and regulated force as a last resort. It would ordinarily detect threats
and deflect them into the hands of other Somaliland security agencies,"
Chopra said.

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Grant McCool)
Received on Fri May 30 2014 - 12:51:09 EDT

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