South Sudan votes 99 percent to separate from north

JUBA, Sudan, (Reuters) – South Sudan almost  unanimously voted to declare independence from the north in a  referendum, officials said  yesterday, sparking mass celebrations  in the southern capital Juba.

Thousands cheered, danced and ululated after officials  announced the first official preliminary results which overall  showed a 98.83 percent majority for separation, according to the  vote’s website.

“This is what we voted for, so that people can be free in  their own country … I say congratulations a million times,”  south Sudan President Salva Kiir told the crowd.

The vote was promised in a 2005 peace deal which ended  decades of north-south conflict, Africa’s longest civil war,  which cost an estimated 2 million lives.
Kiir, the head of the former southern rebel Sudan People’s  Liberation Movement (SPLM), praised his former foe, Sudanese  President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, for agreeing to the 2005  accord.

“Omar al-Bashir took the bold decision to bring peace.  Bashir is a champion and we must stand with him,” said Kiir,  speaking in a mixture of English and the local Arabic dialect.

“The project has not finished … We cannot declare  independence today,” he added.
According to the terms of the accord, south Sudan will be  able to declare independence on July 9, pending any legal  challenges to the results.
Northern and southern leaders still have to agree on their  shared border, how they will split oil revenues after secession  and the ownership of the disputed Abyei region.

“I am so happy. Imagine having schools, no fear, no war.  Imagine feeling like any other people in their own country,”  student Santino Anei, 19, told Reuters.
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the peaceful  vote but told an African Union summit in Addis Ababa he was  still concerned about the unresolved issues.

Washington’s Sudan envoy Scott Gration told Reuters at the  summit the “tough part” of the peace deal was still to come.
“These issues, whether it be borders or citizenship or oil  revenues, cannot be solved unless there is an effort (by north  and south) to work together in a partnership,” he said.

Secession campaigners described the vote as a chance to end  years of perceived northern exploitation. Bashir, who campaigned  for unity, later announced he would accept a separation vote.

Chan Reek Madut, the deputy head of the referendum  commission, told the crowd 99.57 percent of voters in the 10  states of south Sudan voted for independence.

Commission spokesman George Makuer said the 98.83 percent  figure published on the website included votes from southerners  in north Sudan and eight other countries.

Makuer said the final figure was still subject to a final  tally and last minute legal challenges. “But it will not change,  maybe by a few decimal points.”
Overall, the website showed almost 3.8 million votes for  separation and 44,888 votes for continued unity. Final results  are due out in early February.