ZWNews.com ZWNews.com
home Media Centre Get Involved Letters Contact Us
Issues
 
POLITICS
ECONOMY
THE LAND
RULE OF LAW
CORRUPTION
HUMAN RIGHTS
ENVIRONMENT & TOURISM
DRC

Serach ZWNews.com
advanced search


HIVOS!

Sokwanele

SW Radio Africa
The independent voice of Zimbabwe
 
Studio7
 
SW Radio Africa
 
Zimonline
 
Zvakwana
 

help page
SW Radio Africa
The independent voice of Zimbabwe

help page
Thursday 2 September, 2010   HEADLINES
Mercenary intrigue spotlights West Africa's oil curse print friendly version  
author/source:Reuters
published:Thu 11-Mar-2004
posted on this site:Fri 12-Mar-2004
Article Type : News
"Oil has historically been a cause of coups and conflicts in the region. It does bring out the worst in people"
Johannesburg - Oil should have brought wealth and development to bitterly poor West Africa, but instead it has fueled wars, coup plots and even mercenary intrigue. Equatorial Guinea, an oil producer on the Atlantic coast, this week arrested what it called an advance party of 15 mercenaries, saying "enemy powers" and multinational companies had been plotting against the tiny state. Two thousand miles away, Zimbabwe threatened to execute some 60 suspected mercenaries who authorities said had been on their way to Equatorial Guinea to join the plot. Harare has accused U.S., British and Spanish spy agencies of involvement in the alleged plot that could have been straight out of a Frederick Forsyth bestseller. In Forsyth's novel ``The Dogs of War'' it was the discovery of platinum riches in a remote African country that attracted an army of ruthless mercenaries. In West Africa, it is oil. The region is increasingly important to the United States as it seeks to reduce dependence on Middle East supplies, and Washington keeps close watch as governments rise and fall.

The facts are often as murky as the state finances of some oil-rich African states, but analysts say one thing is certain: "black gold" can often attract trouble. "Oil has historically been a cause of coups and conflicts in the region. It does bring out the worst in people," said Teju Akande, an analyst with UK-based oil consultancy Wood Mackenzie. "We are talking about countries that historically have been very poor and oil is seen as fast money," Akande said. The plot story swirling around Equatorial Guinea - sub-Saharan Africa's third largest oil producer - follows a coup attempt last year on West Africa's Sao Tome islands, which are expecting a gush of cash from crude. The region's giant and sub-Saharan Africa's biggest oil producer, Nigeria, has seen its fair share of coups and military takeovers since independence in 1960 - with oil wealth the prize for the big men who seized the reins of power. Angola, the region's number two oil churner, suffered decades of civil war fueled by petrol and diamond dollars. "Oil wasn't the cause of Angola's conflict but it gave the state the resources to fight for a long time," said Keith Campbell, director of South African-based political consultancy Executive Research Associates.

Oil can also equip a state with the means to thwart coups - though this usually means it has spent far too much on guns and not nearly enough on its population. While oil has enriched a corrupt elite, it has stoked tensions with the have-nots. "When you have big revenues coming in you can tighten your grip on power, as in Angola," said one UK-based oil analyst. Regardless of risk or controversy, major international oil companies cannot resist the lure of West Africa. And it has also become a region of strategic importance to the United States, the world's biggest oil consumer. In recent weeks U.S. generals have been criss-crossing the region on a mission they say is to seek ways of securing the unstable area against "international terrorism." Regional analysts say they cannot rule out U.S. military action in the future to secure the flow of West African oil to U.S. markets to ease reliance on the volatile Middle East.

back to top
Zimbabwe's parties will have little to tell Zuma as Mugabe once again digs in his heels
Cape Times (SA) Wed 31-Mar-2010
New charges for Roy Bennett
Times (SA) Wed 31-Mar-2010
Zimbabwe artist granted bail after Matabeleland exhibit
BBC News Wed 31-Mar-2010
Zimbabwe journalist interrogated over land scandal story
APA (France) Wed 31-Mar-2010
Parliamentarians probing Zimbabwe diamond field abuses hit corporate barrier
VOA News Wed 31-Mar-2010
Another snag for Zimbabwe's stop-and-go constitutional revision process
VOA News Wed 31-Mar-2010
Mugabe's premier struggles for slice of power
Financial Times (UK) Wed 31-Mar-2010
South African facilitators back in Zimbabwe as power-sharing parties miss deadline
VOA News Tue 30-Mar-2010
Zim no go area: German business group
Zim Online (SA) Tue 30-Mar-2010
Afriforum seizes Zim property
Times (SA) Tue 30-Mar-2010