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by Lin Zhishen
NAIROBI, Jan. 14 (Xinhuanet) -- After the signing of the final peace agreement over the last weekend between the Sudanese government and the rebel Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A), A
frican nations are on the wings to
capture various economic cooperation opportunities in the once war-torn country.
On Wednesday, the Kenyan government announced plans to establish two
trading centers in Sudan to tap into the emerging market. The centers will be in
southern Sudan and in Khartoum, Kenya's Trade and Industry Minister Mukhisa
Kituyi said, adding the peace deal had increased prospects for enhanced trade
between the two countries.
Southern Sudan covers an area of approximately 850,000 sq. km. and is
expected to offer new opportunities for entrepreneurs in neighboring countries.
The active involvement in Sudan by the donor community and the rapid start
of the reconstruction activities are crucial ingredients for stability in the
delicate phase following the signing of the peace pact, officials said.
"It is expected that the international community will be able to join with the
southern Sudan in the essential task of realizing the long awaited
reconstruction of the country's infrastructure," Peter Nyongo, Kenya's minister
of planning and national development told Xinhua in an interview.
Kenya is pursuing a joint rail connectivity program with the southern
Sudan, which is expected to radically transform the region's infrastructure
connectivity as the rail project also covers the neighboring Uganda and Rwanda.
The plans for the reconstruction of the 2,500 km Uganda-Kenya-southern
Sudan railway, a project that has attracted some of the biggest train
manufacturing firms in Europe, is expected to cost an estimated five billion US
dollars.
Castello Garang, the SPLM/A commissioner for foreign relations, says his
Movement has secured a credit line from the German government to finance the
project.
Garang told Xinhua recently that the SPLM/A negotiated with the German
Treasury for the loan on account of its massive control of the vast oil
resources in the south after the implementation of the peace accords.
South African companies, many with experience working in countries emerging
from conflicts, such as Mozambique, Angola and Congo, are aggressively moving
into Sudan.
One of the South African firms, the Global Railway Engineering Consortium
SA, has reportedly clinched a rail rehabilitation contract with the Sudanese
Railway Corporation.
The two companies have signed an agreement worth 21 million US dollars in
which the SA consortium undertakes to rehabilitate Sudan's ailing rail system,
sources said.
For the South African government, peace in Sudan represents an awakening call
for the maximization of economic cooperation which, according to President
Thabo Mbeki, will promote the New Partnership for Africa's Development.
South African firms, taking note of the massive economic potentials in the
oil-rich southern Sudan region, have clinched two notable deals with the
Sudanese government for exclusive rights to explore oil wells in the country.
Recently, South Africa's National Oil Company, Petro SA, reportedly signed
an agreement with Sudan's State Oil Company, Sudapet, for exclusive rights for
Oil Block 14 in Sudan, where exploration will shortly begin.
In a recent press conference, SPLM/A leader John Garang said the signing of
the comprehensive peace accord "would unlock the massive natural resources in
southern Sudan, which had previously not been exploited because of the war."
"The southern Sudan is ready for a paradigm shift in the political and
economic sectors of the country. Peace is what it means to the people of
southern Sudan. We will work energetically with all the parties in Sudan to
ensure peace," Garang told reporters on the eve of the signing of the final
agreement.
The United States has enforced sanctions against Sudan for being a state
sponsor of terrorism, but US Secretary of State Collin Powell promised that an
end of fighting in Sudan would speed up the normalization of relations.
Powell said during a meeting with Garang and the Sudanese First Vice
President Ali Osman Taha that the United States was ready to help Sudan get all
the international help it needs to rebuild the collapsed infrastructure.
The US government has also made it easier for major companies to get exemptions from the sanctions. US oil companies have recently begun to show interest in Sudan's undeveloped oil fields.
The success of the Sudanese peace deal has benefits for all involved, said
Herman Hanekom, an analyst at the Africa Institute of South Africa.
"From my side, I'm thinking positively in that the south of Sudan is really offering,
not only for the country itself but also for foreign investors, a
fantastic opportunity to bring development through investment to the area," he
said.
Hanekom said for trade opportunities to be realized, the Sudanese
government must prove itself to the people of southern Sudan.
"The government of Khartoum is going to be placed before one fantastic
test. And that is they must, according to the peace agreement, allow a
referendum or plebiscite in six years time for the South to decide whether they
want to retain the unity of Sudanor whether they opt for secession," Hanekom
said.
The peace agreement has to bring an "immediate and clear" benefit to the
people of southern Sudan, said David Mozersky, an analyst for the International
Crisis Group, a global think tank based in Nairobi.
"The international community has a lot to contribute in terms of
development aid and humanitarian support to help support the reconstruction
process in Sudan." he told Xinhua.
"Sudan is going to be number one in Africa and the world for investment, because it's
a large country and the infrastructure is zero. People need buildings,
power, highways, hospitals. They need everything," Tajeldin Awad,
director of Spanish firm Emigres' Sudan operation said.
However, while Africa's largest country offers many opportunities, skeptics
and those with experience working in southern Sudan say there are many
uncertainties and difficulties ahead.
Southern Sudan has seen virtually no development since the 1950's and more
than four million southern Sudanese fled their homes during the war and whether
the donor community will come to Sudan's aid remains to be seen.
The Sudanese government and southern rebels sign the final comprehensive
peace accord in Nairobi on January 9, marking the culmination of two years of
peace process to end the 21-year-old civil war in southern Sudan, the
longest-running in Africa.
The peace pact covers all the eight peace deals signed previously, including earlier agreed protocols on how to share power and natural wealth, what to do with armed forces during a six-year transition period, how to administer the three disputed areas, and the latest on permanent ceasefire and modalities of implementing peace deals. Enditem |