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Southern Sudan Vote Brings Jubilation In Juba

MAGGIE FICK and JASON STRAZIUSO   01/ 7/11 02:48 PM ET  AP

Southern Sudan Vote

JUBA, Sudan — The referendum is known as "The Final Walk to Freedom" – a symbolic journey for those who fought in decades of war, for villagers whose homes were bombed, and for orphans who ended up in U.S. communities as the Lost Boys of Sudan.

The weeklong independence balloting starts Sunday for the southern third of Sudan – Africa's biggest country – on whether to draw a border between the north, which is mostly Arab and Muslim, and the south, populated mostly by blacks who are Christian or animist.

For southern Sudanese like Atem Yak, who survived war, lived amid dire poverty and endured discrimination, it has been a long time coming.

Yak was 5 when Sudan gained independence from Britain in 1956. Yak, now 60, remembers when two dozen chiefs died in attacks in his home village of Kongor in the 1960s. In Sudan's capital, Khartoum, Yak's deep black African skin incited mistreatment.

"I never saw the flag of Sudan as something I owed allegiance to," he said. "The national anthem never represented my will. So I will not shed tears when Sudan breaks into two, provided that this is done peacefully. I will be happy."

Southerners in Juba were not just happy – they were ecstatic Friday as they anticipated the vote. Wearing feathers and grasping ceremonial carved sticks, they danced on dirt streets in a growing city that will be the south's future capital if the referendum passes. They pounded on drums and sang chants for independence.

Southern Sudanese will cast simple, illustrated ballots at polling stations under thatched roof shelters in the remote and impoverished countryside and near newly paved roads in Juba, a city of simple concrete houses and mud huts that got its first paved roads only in recent years.

Yak is educated and wealthy enough to own a car, a rarity in a region where half the people rely on food aid, only 15 percent can read and children die for want of basic medicine. Yak sees the referendum as an opportunity for the African residents of Sudan, who are often denied resources in favor of northern Arabs.

A sharp economic divide lies between the regions, with infrastructure development and government programs heavily weighted to the north. Only 2 percent of southerners complete primary school while 21 percent in the north do. The south, which is the size of France, has only 30 miles (50 kilometers) of paved roads. The north has 2,200 miles (3,600 kilometers).

The top U.S. official in Southern Sudan, Barrie Walkley, said the lack of paved roads made getting polling materials to the sites "remarkably difficult," and that helicopters and motorcycles were used. People also carried the material over long stretches in the many areas where no roads exist.

The U.S. has made the referendum a foreign policy priority and has offered to remove Sudan from the list of state sponsors of terror if Khartoum doesn't hinder the vote, which would create the world's newest country.

The 1983-2005 civil war killed an estimated 2 million people and left many others missing one or more limbs. The presence of these victims throughout the south is a testament to the horrors of the conflict.

More than 1 million people headed north to escape the fighting, and about 3,800 war orphans known as the Lost Boys of Sudan resettled in the U.S. Some of those orphans will join thousands of other Sudanese to vote at polling sites set up in eight U.S. cities.

Dolly Odwong, 45, remembers Russian-made planes bombing the southern capital, which mostly held women and children because the men were out fighting.

"The coming generation will not feel the way we felt. We don't want them running the way we were running and hiding, because when the war started everybody had to run and hide," Odwong said. "Life was very difficult, and people were saying 'God, why us?' That was the question. So now we are thinking that God has heard our prayers. And he is saying 'You people are going to be free.'"

Choosing secession, the south's ruling party tells voters in a pamphlet, will "fulfill the dreams and aspirations of your forefathers, heroes, heroines and martyrs who died in the struggle for freedom."

For the referendum to pass, a simple majority must vote for independence and at least 60 percent of the 3.9 million registered voters must cast ballots.

"Like all other observers I think the referendum will likely produce an overwhelming vote for secession," said Zach Vertin, a Southern Sudan analyst for the International Crisis Group.

If the referendum passes, much work remains. The north and south must reach agreements on the distribution of oil revenues, rights to the White Nile, official borders and citizenship rights. Aid groups fear that southerners living in the north and northerners living in the south will face harassment and abuse.

"At this point, it appears the referendum itself might come off relatively peacefully," said Mike Abramowitz, who leads the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's genocide prevention efforts. "But this is just a first step. This remains a fragile and volatile situation, and the danger will come in the months ahead as the world turns its attention to other matters."

For his part, Yak agrees that "The Final Walk to Freedom" will open a new path on which the quality of life for southerners can be improved as they take command of their own future.

"When you are free ... it should be a means to promote the welfare of others," Yak said. "To me, independence is not an end, it's a means. The struggle will start the day independence is declared."

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JUBA, Sudan — The referendum is known as "The Final Walk to Freedom" – a symbolic journey for those who fought in decades of war, for villagers whose homes were bombed, and for orphans who...
JUBA, Sudan — The referendum is known as "The Final Walk to Freedom" – a symbolic journey for those who fought in decades of war, for villagers whose homes were bombed, and for orphans who...
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
12:02 AM on 01/10/2011
there's a country called Chad and one called Jordan, so this new country should be Quentin
09:29 PM on 01/08/2011
in 10 days there will genocide
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planetjeffy
On the other hand, you have different fingers.
01:38 AM on 01/09/2011
the north will not let go easily - especially with all that oil
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UKVisitor
10:36 AM on 01/08/2011
The North allowing the South to secede? That's damn un-American isn't it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
12:44 PM on 01/08/2011
Let this be a model for the United States -- and be rid of the lazy, federal budget-draining South once and for all!

http://www.bradblog.com/?p=474
10:16 PM on 01/07/2011
Another Muslim battle ground in a few days
08:55 PM on 01/07/2011
muslims have to tried to commit genocide against the christians
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kersho
06:37 PM on 01/07/2011
Southern Sudan is going to be a very deprived and poor country. Their rhetoric is overwhelmingly christian for separation, which doesn't give me hope. Its very uncomfortable to even feel that there could be foreign instigators. We all know how active missionaries are in Africa, and Southern Sudan is no different. They are talking about their "Arab colonizers" and all sorts of colorful language, whilst having their bibles in Arabic...., and their fellow countrymen, to the north, may speak Arabic but they are definitely Black as well. Another landlocked, infrastructural deprived, African nation built on separation based on ethnicity and religion is not something good. The dictatorship in the North is unpredictable, and so are the southern governance leaders--with both openly talking about war, and the latter saying that they don't mind blood bathes in order to defend their separation.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alexis d
09:25 PM on 01/07/2011
I saw John Dau, one of the lost boys, come speak at my school. While this certainly isn't going to turn Southern Sudan into a tourist mecca, it will provide horribly oppressed people with some protection. It's an improvement from an unspeakably awful situation to a merely awful one. And that is cause enough for joy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
YankeeCanuck
dog
12:21 AM on 01/08/2011
There have been bloodbaths for decades there. ANd the south is resource-rich. Watch "God Grew Tired of Us" the story of Sudanese lost boys. THey will return to help their countrymen, and they are an amazing group of people.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
03:27 PM on 01/07/2011
A new beginning. Absolutely wonderful!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
12:48 PM on 01/08/2011
You do know you're taking the side of indigenous non-Muslims with a historic claim to the territory, against Arab Muslim imperialists. There's hope for you yet!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BcemXAHA
Yerushalaim shel zahav
12:50 PM on 01/08/2011
heh
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
01:08 PM on 01/08/2011
Except these indigenous people have lived there all along. Surely you see the difference.

If you knew anything about me, or took the time to read my comments with a critical eye, you'd know that my moral decisions are not based on any semblance of tribalism. I'm half-Jewish, half-Catholic and all atheist. My genes come from three different continents, my tan is dark and permanent, my hair can best be described as an afro. I've lived in 16 countries and speak 4 languages (I don't count Hebrew in there because frankly my Hebrew is embarrassing). So when I measure the morality of a situation or act, it is not filtered through any ancient mythology, tribal loyalty or nationalist narrative. It is based on the values taught to me by my parents; two very good lifelong public servants. They both suffered tremendous racism their entire lives and made it a point to break that cycle with their children.

I hope that clears things up for you.
02:59 PM on 01/07/2011
Whatever. More religious nonsense causing destruction. How'd separation work out for India/Pakistan? Same problems because no matter where you go there you are! Now you will get your muslim and christian nations but of course that won't be good enough because some will deem other of the same faith not pure enough and start fighting over that. One of the lowest literacy rates in the region and it shows in this kind of nonsense. Ignorance isn't bliss..
08:56 PM on 01/07/2011
you can bet the christian south will progress much faster than the muslim north
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
02:09 PM on 01/08/2011
All that oil won't hurt.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
YankeeCanuck
dog
12:23 AM on 01/08/2011
No , it is not religious. The south has more resources that the north wants--like water and oil. Watch "god Grew Tired of Us" about 4 of the lost boys of Sudan. THey are dedicated to helping their "brothers" --it will give a much more hopeful perspective.
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Trollstein
Once you go Schwartz, you never go back baby
02:19 PM on 01/07/2011
There was also mass genocide in the millions which has largely gone unreported. Also largely unreported was the widespread practice of selling captured So. Sudanese into slavery in the Muslim North.
A small but interesting % of the Southern Sudanese people are Jews. Most of the natural wealth of Sudan is concentrated in the South, which will be renamed Cousch (sp?).
I wish I could be with them at this long-awaited moment.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
YankeeCanuck
dog
12:27 AM on 01/08/2011
Trollstein, I'm surely with you on this. I have become acquainted with a few of the "lost boys" (some of them were girls) and they have a dedication to helping others in their country that is almost saintly.
THose children undertook a march of biblical proportions to escape the genocide--a thousand miles into Ethiopia and camps. They formed their own parliament, called each other "brother", and many were dispersed to other countries for education --the US, Cuba, Canada (that I am aware of). The ones I have met have something otherworldly about them.
I would like to be there too.
02:09 PM on 01/07/2011
I hope this really happens. The south has been pillaged for so long it's just a terrible situation.