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Latest Update: Tuesday3/11/2009November, 2009, 10:17 PM Doha Time
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Envoy seeks to resolve Sudan row
AFP/Khartoum
Sudan’s Foreign Minister Deng Alor said most south Sudanese would choose independence if the referendum were held now
US envoy Scott Gration was shuttling between rival Sudanese leaders yesterday in a bid to resolve a row over rules for a promised vote on independence for the south that threatens to derail nationwide elections.
Sudan is due to hold its first presidential, parliamentary and regional elections in 24 years in April and voter registration began on Sunday.
But the southern former rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) has been boycotting parliament until the National Congress Party (NCP) of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir agrees to enact promised security reforms and resolves the row over the 2011 referendum.
“It’s a difficult and lengthy process, but failure is not an option,” Gration said.
“Both the national elections and the referendum on self-determination in southern Sudan are only months, not years, away.
“Obviously we want to see progress and we are working to get this.”
Sudan’s Foreign Minister Deng Alor said most south Sudanese would choose independence if the referendum were held now.
Only a “miracle” can make unity attractive for southerners before they vote in 2011 on whether to break away, said Alor, a former rebel fighter and still a senior SPLM official.
“If southerners were asked now they would overwhelmingly vote for separation,” he told journalists yesterday.
Southern Vice President Riek Machar held talks late on Monday with Second Vice President Ali Osman Taha and the two men were due to meet again yesterday.
But Machar’s office described the atmosphere of the talks as “not friendly.”
The two sides are at loggerheads over the quorum that will be required for the 2011 independence referendum to be valid, a row that has intensified since southern leader Salva Kiir openly called on Saturday for the south to break away.
The NCP is insisting on a minimum two-thirds turnout for the outcome to be binding. The SPLM is demanding a lower figure.
“The SPLM ... called the NCP to meet somewhere between 50 % and 66% for turnout quorum. But the NCP is adamantly refusing to move an inch below the 66%,” Machar’s office said.
“In an effort to bring the two sides together, General Gration asked both sides to abandon their positions and meet somewhere between 62% and 66% for the turnout,” it added.
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