South Sudan votes for independence by a landslide

KHARTOUM, (Reuters) – South Sudan voted overwhelmingly  to declare independence in final results of a referendum  announced yesterday, opening the door to Africa’s newest state  and a fresh period of uncertainty for the fractured region.

Hundreds of south Sudanese danced, screamed and waved flags  as the announcement was broadcast on a line of TV sets in a  square in the centre of the southern capital Juba.

A total of 98.83 percent of voters from Sudan’s  oil-producing south chose to secede from the north in last  month’s referendum, the chairman of the vote’s organising  commission Mohammed Ibrahim Khalil said.

The formal announcement in Khartoum was disrupted by one  northern woman who began wailing in grief and was led from the  room. “Sudan is one country. Why should it separate?” she told  journalists, saying she had relatives in the south.

The referendum is the climax of a 2005 north-south peace  accord that set out to end Africa’s longest civil war and instil  democracy in a country that straddles the continent’s Arab-sub  Saharan divide.

Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir earlier said he  accepted the result, allaying fears that the split could  reignite conflict over the control of the south’s oil reserves.

“Today we received these results and we accept and welcome  these results because they represent the will of the southern  people,” he said in an address on state TV.
Southern officials say the question of a name for the new  state is unresolved but it could become just “South Sudan”.

South Sudan’s leader Salva Kiir added to the conciliatory  mood by promising he would help Khartoum campaign for the  forgiveness of the country’s crippling debts and the easing of  international trade sanctions in coming months.

Both sides avoided major outbreaks of violence over the past  five years. But they failed to overcome decades of deep mutual  distrust to persuade southerners to embrace unity.

“Southern Sudanese are a new people now. We have a new  identity. We have respect from everyone at last. Our country has  come today,” said Rebecca Maluk, a war widow and mother-of-three  in the crowd in Juba.

CIVIL WAR

Many southerners see the vote as a chance to end years of  northern repression, which they say stretches back through years  of civil war to 19th-century raids by slave traders.

The European Union was among the first to say it accepted  the results of the referendum.

“The EU looks forward to further developing a close and long  term partnership with Southern Sudan which is set to become a  new state … in July 2011,” the bloc’s representative in Sudan,  Carlo de Filippi, said.

President Barack Obama said the United States intends to  recognise South Sudan as a sovereign country in July.

“After decades of conflict, the images of millions of  southern Sudanese voters deciding their own future was an  inspiration to the world and another step forward in Africa’s  long journey toward justice and democracy,” he said in a  statement.

The U.S State Department said it is initiating the process  to remove Sudan from the U.S. state sponsors of terrorism list,  but stressed it would only be dropped if it met all criteria  under U.S. law.

Pagan Amum, secretary general of the south’s dominant Sudan  People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) told reporters: “It has  shown that the people of South Sudan were ready and capable to  determine their own future.”   The West’s hands may be tied by the continuing global uproar  over Sudan’s separate Darfur conflict. Bashir is still living  under the threat of arrest warrants issued by the International  Criminal Court over charges he orchestrated genocide in Darfur.