Sudan elections set for major boycott
A spokesman for the main political party the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) confirmed to CNN that the party will boycott large parts of the vote in the north and Darfur. Several opposition parties have joined them.
The elections, set for April 11-13, were supposed to be the first meaningful democratic elections involving the whole of Sudan in over two decades, but they have been marred by widespread allegations of gerrymandering and vote rigging against the ruling National Congress Party (NCP).
Earlier this month the SPLM withdrew its presidential candidate, Yasar Arman, from the race against the incumbent President Omar Al Bashir.
Zach Vertin of the International Crisis group, said: "If these elections do not go according to plan and if a peaceful resolution isn¹t found then I think it is very possible that we will see a return to conflict in Sudan."
Fifty years of conflict between Northern and Southern Sudan killed more than two million people and the war formally ended in 2005 with the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA).
The conflict pitted Northern Government troops against the Sudan Peoples Liberation Army (SPLA) and was a fight between Christian and Animist southerners against Muslim northerners.
The conflict in Darfur, which gained more international media coverage, was a different war and the violence there is regarded as genocide by the U.S. government and resulted in war crimes charges against Al Bashir.
Al Bashir seized power in a military coup in 1989 and brought in Sharia, the Islamic code for living. The implementation of Sharia created divisions between the north and south of the oil-rich nation. Southern Sudan is run as a separate territory from the north.
The elections were stipulated by the CPA as a stepping stone towards unity or separation of the north and south that is set to be decided in January 2011 by a referendum.
Some analysts have said that the elections are the "endgame" in the north whereas the referendum is more important in the south.
Analysts also say that as most of the oil is in the south, a split Sudan could negate sanctions to allow companies to prospect more easily in the South.
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