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Saraakiil Kenyan ah oo Sheegay in 60-Maalmood Gudahood Ay Ku Bilaabi Doonaan Shidaal Baarista

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Nairobi (RBC) Saraakiil ka tirsan wasaaradda arimaha dibadda Kenya ayaa shaaca ka qaaday in mudo lixdan maalmood gudahood ay ku bilaabi doonaan qorshe shidaal looga baarayo meel qiyaastii 15,000 square km ka baxsan xeebta Lamu halkaasoo qiyaastii ku beegan 3900 Sq km xeebta magaalada Kismaayo ee gudaha Soomaaliya.

Saraakiisha Kenyanka waxay sheegeen in qorshaha shidaal baarista uusan ahayn mid qarsoon isla markaana dawlada Kenya ay heysato sharciyo iyo heshiisyo u baneynaya inay shidaal ka baarato dhulka lagu muransan yahay [siday u yaqaanaan]. Waxaana baaritaanka shidaalka badda ee Kenya ay bilaabayso ay la kaashaneysaa shirkado ajnabi ah oo ay ka mid yihiin shirkadda Total ee Faransiiska laga leeyahay, Shirkada Statoil oo laga leeyahay Norway, Shirkada Petrobras oo laga leeyahay Brazil, Shirkadda Apache Corporation Barazil iyo shirkada Tullow Oil Plc oo laga leeyahay UK. [Akhri warbixin lagu daabacay bogga wararka stratiijiyada

Sida lagu daabacay wargeysyada wadanka Kenya, Kenya waxay dejisay inay shidaal ka baarto illaa 8-goobood oo afar ka mid ah ay ku yaalaan xeebta Lamu. Waxaana afartaasi ka mid ah illaa labo goobood oo ku teedsan xeebta magaalada Kismaayo ee gobolka Jubbada Hoose.

Waxaa xusid mudan in Kenya ay dhulka ay shidaalka ka baareyso oo ay ku jirto xeebta Kismaayo u taqaano “dhul biyood lagu muransan yahay”. Illaa haddana DKMG ah ee xilkeedu dhamaaday kama hadlin boobka lagu hayo dhul biyoodka Soomaaliya, waxaana xiise leh in waqtiga ay arimahan Kenya ku dhawaaqday ay tahay xilli doorasho ay ka dhacayso Muqdisho oo dawladii dhacday maamulkeeda iyo musharixiinta cusuba ay ku jiraan loolan siyaasadeed.

Sida wargeysyada qoreen waxaa qorshaha baarista shidaalka uu dabajoogaa duulaanka ciidamada Kenya isu diyaarinayaan inay ku galaan magaalada Kismaayo xilligaasoo ay suurtagal tahay in farsamayaqaanada shirkadaha ajnabiga ee hawsha baarista sameynaya la geeyo xeebaha gobolka Jubbada Hoose si ay u bilaabaan shidaal baarista degdega ee ay Kenya wado.

 

Prof Maxamed Cumar Dalxa

Waxaa beryihii u dambeeyay boobka Kenya ka qeyliyey xildhibaano uu ugu horeeyso Prof Maxamed Cumar Dalxa oo uga digay Kenya inay joojiso waxa uu ugu yeeray “qorshaha ka gaarsiinta” ee ay ku heyso xeebaha jamhuuriyada Soomaaliya.

Heshiisyada ay dawlada Kenya ku doodeyso inay ogolaanayaan inay shidaal ka baarato dhulka ay u taqaano in lagu muransan yahay ayaa ku eg heshiis la sheegay in dawladii Cumar C/rashiid ee uu wasiirka kalluumeysiga ka ahaa C/raxmaan Ibbi u saxiixday Kenya kaasoo uu saxiixay C/raxmaan C/shakuur oo hadda ah musharax u taagan xilka madaxtinimada Soomaaliya. Waxaase xusid mudan in baarlamaankii burburay ee Soomaaliya uu cod aqlabiyad ah ku buriyey heshiiskaasi walow waraaqihii saxiixnaa weli ay yaallaan wasaaradda arimaha dibadda Kenya.

 

Musharax Cabdiraxmaan Cabdishakuur

Musharixiinta oo aan rabin inay hadlaan

Musharixiinta u tartamaya xilka madaxtinimada gaar ahaan kuwa ka soo dhex bacxay dawladii dhacday ee KMG ayaa iska ilaalinaya in Kenya ay qoonsato haddii ay ka horyimaadaan boobkan qaawan ee ay Kenya ku soo wado xeebaha dalka, si gaar ahna waxaaba loogu digay rag masuuliyiinta DKMG ka mid ah oo loo sheegay inay iska daayaan iska horkeenka ay wadaan.

Ilo wareedyo ayaa Raxanreeb u sheegay in arimo badan oo maslaxada dalka ah ay lumi doonaan iyadoo maslaxada siyaasiga ee gaar ahaaneed la fiirinayo, taasina ay dadka iyo dalkaba u keeni doonto murugo qaran oo aan laga soo waaqsan doonin.

RBC Radio

 

If Somalis don't care about thier resources qof kale ayaa ka lacageysanaayo , and funny thing no,politician

Talks about this serious problem .

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Dowladda Gaas arrintan wey ka hadashay;;;;

 

Read

 

By CHRISTINE MUNGAI cmungai@ke.nationmedia.com

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

 

Next year’s General Election and a looming dispute over a maritime border with Somalia are causing jitters among oil explorers in the country, tempering the optimism that had been growing in the industry.

 

Tullow’s Ngamia discovery and the potential for oil wealth could emerge as a highly politicised issue in the coming election, said investment analysts at Germany’s Deutsche Bank.

 

Exploration activity is expected to slow down immediately before and in the aftermath of the election slated for March next year.

 

“This may have an impact on plans for drilling in 2013 (both onshore and offshore),” said the analysts in their study.

 

Fresh optimism that Kenya could strike more oil as well as gas has been building over the past few weeks, as companies have heightened uptake of exploration blocks and activity on wells.

 

Last week, US oil exploration firm Apache began drilling works on the Mbawa oil block situated off the Kenyan coast, becoming the second firm to drill an offshore well in the country’s waters after Australia’s Woodside Petroleum. (READ: US firm joins hunt for oil in Kenyan coast)

 

A potential maritime boundary dispute between Kenya and Somalia is looming, however, creating uncertainty over offshore exploration activity.

 

The dispute relates to a long-running row over whether the maritime border should run directly east parallel to the line of latitude — in line with an MoU signed between Kenya and Somalia in 2009 but subsequently rejected by the Somali parliament — or perpendicular to the coastline.

 

The latter would, in theory, give Somalia a large swathe of offshore waters currently licensed by Kenya and affect the blocks owned by Anadarko, Total and Eni.

 

Apache, which owns 50 per cent of the L8 exploration block, is the lead operator of the block and is expected to conduct drilling to a depth of 3,250 metres below the sea surface over the next 60 days.

Mbawa sits in the Lamu Basin and has generated considerable interestparticularly after successive gas discoveries off the coast of Tanzania and Mozambique, which share geological characteristics with the Kenyan coast.

 

Apache has identified the Tai prospect as an exploration follow-up if the Mbawa 1 well proves successful.

 

Meanwhile, fresh from its recent oil discovery in Turkana, Tullow Oil is expected to drill three more wells in Kenya in the next four months.

 

Analysts at Jefferies Research Group said in a note that the firm will drill Twiga South and North wells this quarter while it is expected to drill the Paipai well in the fourth quarter of the year.

 

A recent survey by Deloitte showed investors are optimistic regarding regional growth fundamentals, and could decide to overlook risks associated with Kenya’s upcoming polls, high inflation across the region, persistent infrastructure deficits, continued currency pressure and economic turmoil in European export markets, the lifeline of the East African Community’s international trade.

 

Deutsche Bank said the desire in the industry, at least based on conversations it held with executives in the exploration business, will be for “an unambiguous election result and a smooth transfer of power to the next president.”

 

Executives expressed fears that were instability to occur, it would be more likely to have an impact on onshore rather than offshore operations.

 

Nairobi and the South Rift region were the flashpoints after the 2007 election, but most exploration activity on the mainland is concentrated in the North Rift, including the Ngamia-1 well, which has produced the best results so far, lessening the chances of a major impact.

 

“The Ngamia discovery, and the potential for oil wealth has been a major story in Kenya and could play a prominent role in the election,” states the report.

 

Back to the Somalia and Kenya maritime dispute, executives are banking on projections that Eni and Total’s ultra-deep water blocks may not see any drilling until 2014.

 

The blocks are among seven recently awarded by Kenya, three of them to Eni and one to Total.

 

Last month, Somalia’s government accused Kenya of awarding offshore oil and gas exploration blocks illegally to France’s Total and Italy’s Eni because the blocks lie in waters claimed by Somalia.

 

Speaking to Reuters earlier this month, Somali Deputy Energy minister Abdullahi Dool said contracts awarded for four blocks in deep waters were invalid and the government planned to complain to the United Nations, which oversees maritime border laws.“We are concerned about the lease of blocks,” Mr Dool told Reuters. “I am sure we will lodge complaints.”

 

But Kenya rejected the accusation that ownership of the blocks was contested, and said there was no need to hold up exploration.

 

Border disputes over oil exploration are heating up as the region becomes the new frontier in oil and gas — Malawian President Joyce Banda is expected to meet her Tanzanian counterpart Jakaya Kikwete over the weekend to discuss a dispute over Lake Malawi, where a British-based company is exploring for oil.

 

The border dispute erupted after Malawi last year issued a licence to British firm Surestream Petroleum to prospect for hydrocarbons in Lake Malawi in an area covering 20,000 square kilometres

 

But Tanzania says the exploration has extended into what it claims is its half of the lake and wants exploration halted until ownership of the water

 

 

Haddii aad rabti in aad dagaaalka qalinka ka qeyqaadato taageer dhalinyaradda is xilsaartey, apply membership

at http://www.eaenergyforum.org/people.html, see articles in my post Say bye bye to.....

 

 

Abdillahi Mohamud

Managing Director

abdillahi@eaenergyforum.org

 

Said Mohamed

Public Relations Director

said@eaenergyforum.org

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I have just shot this email to join East African Energy Forum and I hope many of you will join this fight.

 

I am very supportive of your noble initiative to become a springboard for Somali youth to get connected and in a single voice shed light on the persisting and illegal encroachment on the maritime territory of Somali Republic by the Kenyan Government with the help of some giant western oil companies.

 

I urge you to never get tired of this fight and if you succeed in developing a roster of Somali western educated individuals who have Big Pens and Big Mouths and not happy campers in any stretch of the imagination about the theft of their national resources, I believe you will be heroes in Somali social circles (heroism is rare commodity in Somalia right now).

 

I live in Toronto and I am from the older generation but if I can be of any assistance to this noble cause please do not hesitate a second. Please add me in your email list and let me become the privileged ones who receive your achievements and disappointments firsthand. A. B

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Daqane   
Since when did complaining to the U.N ever help? Power and its judicious application solves issues and on that note Somalia and its complaining leadership can do nothing if they actually wanted to do something in the first place.

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Daqane;860654 wrote:
Since when did complaining to the U.N ever help? Power and its judicious application solves issues and on that note Somalia and its complaining leadership can do nothing if they actually wanted to do something in the first place.

Dont be fooled my friend right now kenya is in a more fragile state than somalia, just a few days ago 48 Kenyans were hacked to death, and UN observers suggest this up coming election is going to be the most violent in the countries history. The UN doesn't want another ******-region issue, I suspect they will not allow kenya to do as they please. Then again the UN has become something of a corporate house boy and I doubt they will ask multi-billion dollar american oil firms to stop making profit.....This should get interesting.

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