My Africa Channel TV: UPDATE 1-Ten killed in Sudan ambush as south votes: minister
January 11, 2011 12:19:50 PM
SUDAN-REFERENDUM (UPDATE 1)
Source News Feed: Reuters World Service
Word Count: 587
* Armed men kill 10, southern minister says
* Turnout strong as vote enters third day
(Recasts with ambush report, adds background)
By Jeremy Clarke and Jason Benham
JUBA, Sudan, Jan 11 (Reuters) - Armed men killed 10 southern Sudanese in an ambush, a southern minister said on the third day of a referendum on independence for the south, but voters have defied gloomy predictions and turned out in huge numbers.
The attack on a convoy of people returning to the south for the referendum was the latest reported violent incident to mar the week-long vote, which is expected to see the south emerge as a new nation.
Vote organizers told Reuters a big turnout so far was almost guaranteed to reach the 60 percent of voters needed to make the poll valid.
"A number of returnees were ambushed yesterday by a group of armed Misseriya. They ambushed 10 buses and seven trailers loaded with the belongings with these IDPs (internally displaced persons) coming from the north," southern internal affairs minister Gier Chouang Aloung told reporters on Tuesday.
Aloung said the attack had happened on the northern side of the border between the northern state of Southern Kordofan and the southern state of Northern Bahr al-Ghazal and local authorities had told him 10 died in the attack.
"The 10 south Sudanese could have voted ... These attacks are not in south Sudan. It is in northern Sudan. The Misseriya is not a foreign tribe. It is in Sudan ... so the north is responsible."
Mohamed Wad Abuk, a senior member of the area's Arab Misseriya nomads, denied any involvement in the attack.
"This is a lie and the Misseriya has not attacked any convoy. The SPLM just want to exploit the situation in the area to create confusion," he said, referring to the south's dominant party the Sudan People's Liberation Movement.
The latest attack comes after four days of confirmed clashes between Misseriya nomads and southern police and youths in the contested Abyei border region, a flash-point of north-south tensions in the past.
Thousands of people took part in the third day of voting elsewhere in the south, an undeveloped region with 60km (40 miles) of paved roads, the second highest rates of maternal mortality in the world and one of the worst records for primary school attendance.
"It is proceeding very, very smoothly. There doesn't seem to be any fear of not reaching the 60 percent limit. As a matter of fact we think it will do a lot better than that," said the chairman of the vote's organizing commission, Mohammed Ibrahim Khalil.
Khalil, a northern lawyer based in Khartoum, told Reuters some polling centers had already received between a quarter and a half of the voters registered in their district in the first two days of the week-long vote.
The referendum was promised in the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement that ended Africa's longest civil war between the mostly Muslim north and the south, where most follow Christianity and traditional beliefs.
Under the regulations, the vote needs a 60 percent turnout to be valid. More than 50 percent of voters need to choose independence for the south to secede -- seen as the most likely outcome.
Final results are due out before Feb. 15 with preliminary figures expected up to two weeks earlier. Around 4 million people signed up to vote in the south and in diaspora communities of southerners in the north and abroad.
(Additional reporting by Andrew Heavens in Khartoum; Editing by Peter Graff)
MAC.TV is an independent network television broadcasting company that owns and operates the largest African broadcast television station group in the U.S. MAC.TV and Ethiopian Radio and Television Agency (ERTA) currently broadcasts to over 6 global satellites worldwide reach major cities in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. VISIT US ON THE WEB AT HTTP://WWW.MYAFRICACHANNEL.TV
Pages
Popular Posts
-
As reportedby AlJazeera:
-
January 28, 2011 Washington D.C Williams Ekanem A strong United States representatives in ...
-
February 22, 2011 5:52:51 AM * Libya 's U.N. diplomats say they serving the people * Sta...
-
* Nine companies owned, controlled by Gaddafi targeted * U.S. Treasury removes sanctions from a Libyan defector * Kerry, McCain want Sen...
-
August 17, 2011 9:36:45 PM ERITREA-UN/SANCTIONS * Eritrea says Ethiopia seeks regime change, sea access * Proposed sanctions would hit ...
-
India 's bickering political parties unite to urge ailing anti-corruption campaigner Anna Hazare to end his 9-day fast, which has g...
-
By THANDISIZWE MGUDLWA Associated Press CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - The cookies, candies, jams and juice were destined for a dump when...
-
This video was filmed by a cell phone at an I-HOP in Atlanta around 4:00 in the morning. The woman punched was not even being arrested, un...
-
Prominent Syrian leftist jailed 7 1/2 yrs January 23, 2011 11:19:29 PM * Sentence seen as harsher than usual * Abbas, 69, already spent 17 y...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment