NYT : By JANE PERLEZ
Published: April 25, 2012
BEIJING — China has welcomed the president of South Sudan and agreed to provide bank loans and humanitarian aid, but it has stopped short of moving forward on an oil pipeline, a sign of the delicate position Beijing finds itself in as the biggest energy investor in both the new nation of South Sudan and its bitter foe, Sudan.
As the two new nations continued to edge toward outright war this week
and Salva Kiir, the president of South Sudan, cut short his trip to
China, the government here urged both sides to use international
mediation.
Before oil-rich Sudan was partitioned into two countries last year,
China financed the pipelines and refineries in the north to carry and
process the oil that largely lies in the south.
Energy analysts say Sudanese oil makes up only 3 to 4 percent of China’s
total oil imports, but China, traditionally reluctant to get involved
in foreign disputes, is now at the center of attention in a looming
conflict between two developing countries that depend on its economic
largess.
A new Chinese special envoy, Zhong Jianhua, a former ambassador to South
Africa, visited Sudan and South Sudan last month as China tried to
maintain neutrality.
The United States also has a special envoy, Princeton Lyman, a former
ambassador to South Africa, and the two diplomats have been in touch, a
senior Chinese official said Wednesday.
“We hope the China-United States cooperation will pay off,” said Cui
Tiankai, a vice foreign minister, at a briefing at the Foreign Ministry
in Beijing.
In the 1990s, when China first invested in Sudan as a source of oil,
Beijing cultivated a close relationship with President Omar Hassan
al-Bashir, who has been charged by the International Criminal Court with orchestrating genocide in Darfur.
The United States scorned Mr. Bashir but maintained close ties with the
rebels in southern Sudan, and supported the breakaway province’s claim
to statehood.
Mr. Kiir’s visit to China showed that Beijing was seeking to secure and
expand its footprint in South Sudan’s oil sector, said Zach Vertin,
senior analyst on Sudan and South Sudan for the International Crisis Group
in Nairobi, Kenya. The China National Petroleum Corporation is the
primary Chinese operator in South Sudan, Mr. Vertin said.
South Sudan stopped producing oil in late January after it accused Sudan of stealing
some of its oil meant for export. The tensions have since erupted into
violence, with Sudanese war planes dropping bombs and South Sudanese
forces rushing in at one point to occupy an oil-producing region,
Heglig, in Sudan.
As a chief partner to the warring sides, China has also found itself a target.
In January, 29 Chinese workers involved in building a $63 million road financed by the Export-Import Bank of China were abducted by rebels in the oil-rich region of South Kordofan Province in Sudan.
In February, South Sudan, angered that China was not sufficiently on its
side, expelled the president of the Chinese oil consortium based in
Juba, the capital of South Sudan.
Mr. Kiir’s trip to Beijing was interpreted as an effort, in part, to
secure financing for a pipeline that South Sudan would like to build
through Kenya to a port on the Indian Ocean. The new route would give
South Sudan’s oil access to a port other than Port Sudan, located on the
Red Sea, the main exit point for oil from the south.
China would be a logical financier for such a pipeline, said Li Xinfeng, a researcher at the Institute of West Asian and African Studies
at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. But any decision by China
would be made on a commercial, not political, basis, he said.
While the visit of Mr. Kiir showed that China was interested in
improving its relationship with South Sudan, Beijing did not want to
appear to be taking sides by announcing a major pipeline investment as
the two countries seemed headed for war.
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