20.09.11 Sahara Focus
US seeking to exempt South Sudan from sanctions, says diplomat

The US government has indicated that South Sudan will be exempt from the
sanctions regime applied to Sudan, from which it declared independence earlier
this
year.
On 16th September, US special representative for Sudan Princeton Lyman said that the US
Treasury Department was currently drawing up a new set of regulations governing
investments in South Sudan, which would allow oil companies to start moving
into
Juba without running afoul of sanctions targeted at Khartoum.
Technically, companies investing in South Sudan are already exempt from the
sanctions on Sudan (imposed in 1997 in response to human rights violations and
support for terrorism). The two countries' oil industries and infrastructure
are so
tightly connected, however, that it is difficult to invest without
inadvertently
becoming involved with Sudanese companies. Currently, the Sudanese oil industry
is dominated by Asian companies, particularly Chinese and Indian firms, and US
companies are eager to return to the market.
Revising the sanctions regime will take time and would require Congressional
approval. Lyman suggested that the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control would produce regulations which permit new oil deals provided that the benefit
to northern Sudan was incidental.
A major challenge will be ensuring that oil from South Sudan reaches world
markets without breaching sanctions on Sudan. Although the south contains most
of the
oilfields, the north controls the pipeline infrastructure which allows oil to
be
exported.
Foreign investment will be critical to maintaining and upgrading South Sudan's
dilapidated oil infrastructure. Another challenge will be to tackle corruption
and transparency in South Sudan, which US officials have warned is a major
factor
in inhibiting foreign firms from investing in the country.
Sources: Reuters, Sudan Tribune
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