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Huge turnout in south Sudan referendum expected to back secession from the north of the country. Last Modified: 15 Jan 2011 17:12 GMT | ||
A handful of South Sudanese have voted on the final day of a week-long referendum on whether to split from the north of the country. "Preliminary results will be announced on January 31st. Those figures will then have to be verified in Khartoum. If there are no appeals, officials say a final result will be announced on February 6," Al Jazeera's Haru Mutasa, reporting, from Juba. "They have technically until the 9th of July, [which is] when the comprehensive peace agreement expires," reported Mutasa. In the few centres where he had seen counting under way, he said, the votes "were practically unanimous in favour of separation with only a few ballots to the contrary". The referendum marks the culmination of the 2005 comprehensive peace agreement, which ended a civil war in the country. A senior official of Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir's National Congress Party (NCP) said the north would accept the outcome of the vote even if it was for partition of Africa's largest nation. He said the UN was expecting between 500,000 and 600,000 people to arrive by August. "Obviously the emotions around the referendum have prompted many southerners to come home," he said, speaking at Juba's river port on the White Nile where many of the returnees arrive. "I feel sad," Mustafa Mohammed, a young tax officer, said. "I am not for secession." Rally in north Meanwhile, thousands of Sudanese demonstrated in the Nuba mountains in the north, demanding free and fair elections ahead of a planned move toward greater autonomy. Kauda, a remote mountain town, is a stronghold of the Sudan's People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), the biggest political party in the south, but falls in the northern state of South Kordofan. Large crowds gathered in the town, chanting anti-government slogans and waving SPLM flags. The protesters claimed that the election process was not going as planned in their area. "The government wants to use the old list of voters. But the list does not include all the population here. Many people can't find their names on the list," Sadiq Said, one of the demonstrators, said. The election is part a "popular consultation" process that many in the area believe will help them achieve independence from the north.. | ||
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Source: Al Jazeera and agencies |
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Sunday, 16 January 2011
South Sudan poll ends
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