From: Biniam Tekle (biniamt@dehai.org)
Date: Wed Sep 16 2009 - 08:44:14 EDT
Ethiopia’s Rebels Threaten Oil Companies in Ogaden Region
By Jason McLure
Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Ethnic Somali rebels from the Ogaden National
Liberation Front issued a fresh warning to companies exploring for oil in
Ethiopia’s eastern Somali region, known as the Ogaden.
No business should be conducted in Ogaden “until there is a political
solution to the conflict,” the ONLF said today in an e-mailed statement. The
rebels “will not be responsible for any collateral damages that occur from
its engagements with the Ethiopian army,” according to the statement. The
group also accused oil companies of “disinheriting the Ogaden people of
their natural resources.”
The warning from the rebel group comes after the Ethiopian Reporter, an
Addis Ababa-based newspaper, said that a contractor for Malaysia’s Petroliam
Nasionale Bhd had resumed drilling in the remote region late last month.
Petronas suspended operations there in April 2007 after the ONLF attacked an
exploration site near the town of Abole, killing 73 people. The site was
operated by a Chinese contractor, Zhonguyuan Petroleum Exploration Bureau.
Shimeles Kemal, a spokesman for the Ethiopian government declined to comment
immediately when reached on his mobile phone today in the capital, Addis
Ababa.
The ONLF is seeking autonomy for Ethiopia’s Somali region, an arid land
twice the size of England that is home to about 4 million people, most of
whom are ethnic Somali nomadic herders. Conflict between the ONLF and
Ethiopia has simmered for the past two decades.
To contact the reporter on this story: Jason McLure in Addis Ababa via
Johannesburg on pmrichardson@bloomberg.net
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