Qatar News
Bashir promises to aid south if it breaks away
Sudan’s President Omar Hassan al-Bashir pledged yesterday to help build a secure, stable and brotherly state in the south if it votes for independence in a referendum less than two weeks away. “We will not deny our southern brothers their decision, and we will help them to build their state, because we want a secure and stable state... if there are troubles, these troubles will come to us,” Bashir said in a speech broadcast live on state television. Speaking before thousands of supporters in Gezira state, Sudan’s breadbasket southeast of Khartoum, Bashir said he would be “the first to recognise the south” if it chooses secession in a free and fair vote on January 9. “The ball is in your court and the decision is yours. If you say unity, welcome. And if you say secession, also welcome, and welcome to a new brotherly state.” “We are going to co-operate and integrate in all areas because what is between us is more than what is between any other countries.” Some 3.5mn southerners are registered to vote in the plebiscite, according to referendum commission spokesman George Makuer Benjamin. Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and genocide in Darfur, said earlier this month that the north would reinforce Shariah, or Islamic law, after the referendum which is widely expected to grant the south independence. Arab League chief Amr Moussa said yesterday that he saw no indication that north and south Sudan would return to war. “I don’t see any indication that the parties have the willingness to go back to war,” Moussa told reporters in Khartoum. “What is going on between them is far away from war. There is a political good will.” Moussa was speaking at the start of a two-day visit to Sudan that will also take him to the southern capital Juba. North and south Sudan fought a devastating 22-year civil war, in which some 2mn people died, that formally ended with the signing of a comprehensive peace agreement in 2005. The January 9 referendum is the key plank of the 2005 peace deal. Since July, Khartoum and Juba have been unsuccessfully discussing the key post-referendum sticking points, including future citizenship arrangements, the sharing out of natural resources—especially oil—security and compliance with international accords. “I will discuss post-referendum issues in Khartoum and Juba and how to save a good relationship between the north and the south,” Moussa said. “The future of the relationship has an impact on the region.”
Date: 29th December 2010 12.00AM
News Source: http://gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=407001&version=1&template_id=37&parent
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