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EU bans oil imports from Syria
by Staff Writers
Sopot, Poland (AFP) Sept 2, 2011

The European Union on Friday adopted a ban on crude oil imports from Syria as ministers from the 27-nation bloc looked to tighten the screws on the Assad regime at a gathering in Poland.

The sanctions "will go straight to the heart of the regime", said Dutch Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal.

The oil embargo, to take effect from Saturday, will deprive Assad's regime of a vital source of cash. The EU buys 95 percent of Syria's crude oil, providing a third of the regime's hard currency earnings.

Though the loss of the oil will be little felt across the European Union, where Syrian crude accounts for a mere 1.5 percent of the bloc's imports, Syria has already warned it will find buyers elsewhere.

"We can resolve our problems with the help of China," central bank chief Adib Mayaleh told AFP in an interview last week. "If the Europeans withdraw the Chinese can easily take their place and fill the vacuum. Russia too can help us."

While further action to squeeze Damascus was not on the official agenda of the ministers' two-day talks, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton pledged there would be no let-up in efforts to press Assad to end the regime's relentless repression.

"We have been looking at what more we can do," Ashton said on arriving for the talks. "That is a conversation that keeps going on ... a conversation on what more can be done."

New sanctions could include a ban on investments in the oil sector, diplomats said.

"Right now it is crucial that we isolate the regime," said German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, who has been under sharp pressure at home for favouring sanctions over military intervention in Libya.

Westerwelle insisted sanctions would work to force the Assad regime to start a dialogue with dissenters but that the EU needed to work hand-in-glove with regional partners, notably Turkey.

The sanctions, added Sweden's Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, "will truly bite".

"We are serious," he said on Twitter.

The EU on Friday also expanded a list of around 50 people -- including Assad himself -- targeted by an assets freeze and travel ban, adding four Syrian businessmen accused of bankrolling the regime, diplomats said.

And three firms, including a bank, were added to an existing blacklist of eight Syrian and Iranian firms. The identities of the new targets will be released Saturday in the EU's Official Journal.

"The prohibition concerns purchase, import and transport of oil and other petroleum products from Syria. No financial or insurance services may be provided for such transactions," an EU statement said.

Syrian crude oil exports, a key contributor to government revenue, are purchased mainly in the EU by Denmark, Italy, France, the Netherlands, Austria and Spain, in that order.

The move to tighten the screws on Assad's regime comes as major European powers ratchet up support for Syrian dissenters, with one diplomatic source saying some EU members "may be considering a Libya-style intervention".

France said Friday it planned to boost its contacts with the opposition in Syria to try and bring an end to the bloody crackdown on anti-regime protests.

"We will develop our contacts with the opposition," Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said, without elaborating. "We will not let up on our efforts to bring an end to the repression and to secure a democratic dialogue."

In Spain, Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero too urged the international community to support Syrians protesters following the success of UN-backed action in Libya.

"This example should extend to other countries like Syria (where people are) fighting for freedom," he said.

Assad's regime has defied Western sanctions over its deadly crackdown on dissent, blaming "armed terrorist gangs" for the violence.

The United Nations says that more than 2,200 people have been killed since the beginning of near-daily protests across the country against Assad's regime in mid-March.

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Bulgaria to claim back pardoned Libyan debt: PM
Sofia (AFP) Sept 2, 2011 - Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov said Friday that he would claim back 56.6 million dollars of Libyan communist-era debt that Sofia agreed to write off in 2007.

Bulgaria had pardoned the whole of Libya's long-unserviced debt in exchange for the release of five Bulgarian nurses sentenced to death over an AIDS epidemic at a children's hospital in Benghazi.

"The Bulgarian state will insist to have this debt of several dozen million (dollars) reimbursed, as Bulgaria should not in any way lose this money," Borisov was cited as saying by Focus news agency.

After the July 2007 release of the five nurses, Bulgaria announced it was writing off Libya's debt as aid, to "pursue the renovation of medical infrastructure and the treatment of the AIDS-infected children".

But Borisov, whose right-wing government took power in July 2009, has always qualified the debt cancellation as "racket".

The five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor spent over eight years in a Libyan jail for allegedly infecting 438 children with HIV-tainted blood at a paediatric hospital in Benghazi.

The case sparked an international outcry, eventually leading to the medics' release and return to Bulgaria on July 24, 2007, where they were immediately pardoned by Bulgarian President Georgy Parvanov.

Bulgaria also recently announced it was resuming a probe into claims by the six that they were tortured by Libyan police into confessing their guilt.

Former foreign minister Ivaylo Kalfin, who took part in the negotiations that led to the medics' release, on Friday reproached Borisov for "not knowing the facts, or international law".

"Bulgaria cancelled the accumulated Libyan debt before (the fall of Bulgaria's communist regime in) 1989, which had never been recognised by Tripoli," Kalfin said.

"Instead, Bulgaria should ask the future Libyan government for a clear political declaration of the Bulgarian medics' innocence ... and say that the trial in Libya was a set-up."

Kalfin, a candidate in Bulgaria's presidential election next month, said he would like to see a new trial to exonerate the medics.





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ENERGY TECH
Commentary: Global con?
Washington (UPI) Sep 1, 2011
Were the United States, France, Britain, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Qatar and the United Arad Emirates - the NATO-led coalition that set out to overthrow Col. Moammar Gadhafi's regime - snookered by al-Qaida? A preposterous scenario with some disturbing factual elements. In the early 1990s, when James Woolsey was the director of the CIA, Gadhafi appealed to his U.S. interlocutors for a ... read more


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