For The Sake Of Oil, China Enters South Sudan Fray

International Business Times

Published Apr 09, 2014 11:04AM ET

Updated Apr 09, 2014 11:30AM ET

By Jacey Fortin - GAMBELA, Ethiopia -- Rebel fighters in South Sudan have set their sights on a new target: oil. Their tactics are putting the interests of the world's second-largest economy at risk.

All of the crude currently flowing from South Sudan is produced in government-held territory in Upper Nile State, and opposition leader Riek Machar says his fighters are mobilizing to occupy the Paloch oil fields there. A successful offensive would not only curtail revenues for South Sudan's government; it would also threaten China's stake in crude production.

That's why China is pursuing a new strategy in South Sudan's conflict. Beijing is typically known for its non-interventionist policies in Africa, where Chinese companies invest copiously and without much concern for who is in power. But even before the rebels set their sights on Paloch, China had been partnering with Western and African mediators in an attempt to bring peace to the world's youngest country, where the two largest ethnic groups have been pitted against each other in an increasingly bloody showdown.

Machar says that a rebel push towards the Paloch oil fields is long overdue; he objects to President Salva Kiir using those oil revenues to fund government troops. Machar, who served as vice president until his sacking in July, wass accused of plotting a coup against Kiir, late las year. He fled the capital Juba in December, and has since become the nominal leader of the rebellion.

The conflict has deep roots; South Sudan's ruling party, the Sudanese People's Liberation Movement, or SPLM, and its army, the SPLA, suffered from internal divisions even before the nation achieved formal independence from Sudan in 2011. The rebels, who call themselves the SPLM/A in Opposition, argue that Kiir's government has squandered oil revenues – which make up about 98 percent of the national budget – and failed to tolerate criticism or reform within the party.