UN Chief Welcomes End Of Polling In Southern Sudan
UN Chief Welcomes End Of Polling In Southern Sudan's Referendum On Self-Determination
New York, Jan 15 2011 1:10PM
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today welcomed the end of the polling period for the referendum on the self-determination of Southern Sudan, and congratulated the people for their patience and peaceful determination to cast their ballots, which characterized voting over the past week.
Mr. Ban commended the work of the Southern Sudan
Referendum Commission (SSRC) in Khartoum and its Bureau in
Juba, Southern Sudan's capital, and of the two parties to
the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended two
decades of civil war between northern and southern
Sudan.
He extended his gratitude to all donor countries
whose contributions facilitated the referendum process and
voiced his appreciation of the work of observer groups that
travelled throughout Sudan and overseas to assess the
situation.
The Secretary-General "calls on the people and
institutions of Sudan to exercis
e patience and restraint
until the Southern Sudan Referendum Commission announces the
final result of the referendum," said a statement issued by
his spokesperson.
The outcome of the 9 to 15 January vote will determine whether the south remains part of Sudan or chooses independence. Sixty per cent of the nearly 4 million registered voters have to cast their ballots for the result to be valid.
According to SSRC, preliminary results are expected to be announced by 2 February and, depending on whether appeals are submitted to courts or not, the final result on whether Southern Sudan secedes and becomes the UN's 193rd Member State or remains part of a united Sudan will be declared on 7 or 14 February.
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