/ 24 March 2005

Sudanese stand by oil deal with ex-cricketer

South Sudan’s provisional government said on Wednesday it will stand by the controversial oil-exploration deal it has struck with a British company fronted by ex-England cricketer Phil Edmonds.

Shares in the tiny British oil company have soared since it announced a deal in war-torn Sudan. But a consortium fronted by French group Total has claimed that it has rights over the area.

Costello Garang Ring Lual, a member of the national executive committee of the Sudan’s People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) and south Sudan’s international development commissioner, said: ”It is not possible for Total to come back.

”We have controlled this area for the last 20 years, we have fought for it. For someone to think they can come in and take it is just wrong. The government in the north [Khartoum] knows we are right. The agreement is very clear.”

Total claims a production-sharing contract struck in 1980 and re-signed in December is still valid. The deal covers a huge area of south Sudan, including Block Ba — 67 500 square kilometres of land that some observers believe could contain five billion barrels of oil.

Garang’s comments come as Edmonds puts the finishing touches to a deal that will see the SPLM sell 60% of Block Ba in return for a 50% holding in his company, White Nile. The deal is expected to be announced next week, at which point White Nile shares will start trading again.

They were suspended just more than a month ago after they had risen 13-fold in less than a week, a performance that revived memories of the dotcom boom.

At the suspension price of 137 pence a share, White Nile was valued at £190-million despite the fact that its only tangible asset was the £9-million of cash it raised in a private placing at 10 pence.

Garang also sought to clarify recent reports that the oil ministry in Khartoum has control over oil deals in the south.

He said that Block Ba belongs to the people of the south and that the peace agreement, which brought to an end 21 years of civil war, specified that all contracts signed before January 9 will be honoured. White Nile’s agreement with the SPLM predates Total’s renewed claim on Block Ba by several months.

He also pointed out that Sudan’s new petroleum commission, which will have to approve the White Nile transaction once it is up and running, will include both government and SPLM members.

Asked why the SPLM has teamed up with a former Test cricketer rather than a multinational oil company to develop the oil field, he said the deal will help the new regional government pay for several big infrastructure projects, including railway lines to Kenya and Uganda and a telecoms network.

”Through this deal, south Sudan can benefit before oil production begins,” he said. — Guardian Unlimited Â