Sudan delays voters’ registration

Southern Sudanese pro-independence activists march through the southern capital of Juba on 9 September 2010. Analysts fear there is a risk of the conflict restarting if southerners feel the vote is being delayed

Sudan has delayed the registration of voters for January’s referendum on secession for the south until November, raising tensions over the timetable.

The chairman of the referendum commission said this was to allow for staff training and delivery of forms.

Tanzania’s former President Benjamin Mkapa, appointed by the UN to oversee the vote, has told the BBC many challenges lie ahead .

But he said if all parties were willing, the timetable would be met.

The referendum was part of a 2005 peace deal to end two decades of conflict between the north and oil-rich south in which some 1.5 million people died.

Analysts fear there is a risk of the conflict restarting if southerners feel that Khartoum is trying to delay or disrupt the vote in the oil-rich region – one of the world’s poorest and least developed regions.

Chairman of the Southern Sudan Referendum Commission, Muhammad Ibrahim Khalil, said the registration had been delayed by three weeks till 15 November.

According to Reuters news agency, registration forms have not yet arrived from the printers in South Africa – and are not due until late October.

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Mr Mkapa was appointed last week by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to lead a special monitoring panel to ensure a smooth build up to the polls.

Asked on the BBC’s Network Africa programme if he would dare delay the referendum if preparations did not go to plan, Mr Mkapa said: “We’ll cross that bridge, when we get to it.

“But as of now I feel our obligation is to make sure it happens on the 9th of January.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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