South Sudan Says It Will Not Be Bound by Census

Posted by AFP on Monday, April 21, 2008 at 8:49 AM (PST)

JUBA, Sudan, April 16, 2008 (AFP) - South Sudan said on Wednesday it was unlikely to accept the results of a national census after its northern former enemy insisted that the survey, crucial to a fragile peace agreement, go ahead.

"We are not bound by the outcome of the census if it is carried out by the presidency," south Sudan Information Minister Gabriel Changson Chang told AFP after President Omar el-Beshir ordered that the survey go ahead despite southern doubts.

Chang said on Monday that the census, originally due to take place on April 15, had been deferred until later this year, but Beshir subsequently issued a decree insisting that it proceed next week.

Cash-flow problems and logistic headaches have dogged preparations for the repeatedly delayed population count, a crucial part of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended Africa's longest-running civil war.

Chang said that it is "a very difficult if not impossible proposition" for the north to address southern objections to the way the census is being prepared before it starts on April 22.

Southern concerns focus on the repatriation of internally displaced and refugees to the south, making funds available for security and adequate provision of census forms in the appropriate language.

"I don't know what credible results will come out of that," Chang said, complaining about "a lot of discrepancies" over forms in Arabic going to areas where Arabic is not properly spoken and in English to Arabic-speaking areas.

The census is to prepare for voter registration for elections due in 2009. Its results will also redraw or confirm the ratio of power-sharing between north and south in the central government.

Click here for the full article.

Donate Now
 
RSS Subscription

   AID SUDAN   PO Box 770693 Houston,   TX 77215-0693   p 713.414.5490        Copyright © 2008 Aid Sudan        Website by Aixen