Last Update: Sun Feb 27, 2011 06:53 pm (KSA) 03:53 pm (GMT)

S Sudan independence vote body divided: chief

Members and supporters of the Southern Sudan Youth Forum for Referendum march through the southern Sudan capital of Juba (File)

Members and supporters of the Southern Sudan Youth Forum for Referendum march through the southern Sudan capital of Juba (File)

The head of a commission to plan south Sudan's looming vote on independence said north- south divisions within the body were undermining preparations and threatened to resign if the deadlock continued.

Mohamed Ibrahim Khalil said the Jan. 9 vote which many analysts believe will create the world's newest nation should be a national process. He criticised five southerners in the nine-member referendum commission for excluding northerners from taking a key post.

"If things continue like this I will just excuse myself that's all," Khalil told Reuters in an interview on Sunday.

The divisions have left referendum arrangements at a standstill with no schedule to begin complex voter registration which, according to the law, should have already been completed.

Khalil said the five southerners were voting as a block to prevent any northerner taking the key post of secretary-general, a principle he said he could not accept.

The secretary-general controls the funds and budget of the commission and south Sudan's ruling party has warned the deadlock could derail the vote -- the climax of a 2005 landmark north-south peace deal which ended Africa's longest civil war.

"This (commission) can only work if we can get people to be cooperative, to have mutual trust ... and to approach things objectively from a national point, not from the point of view of north and south," the lawyer and former foreign minister said.

"Foregone conclusion"

"With things as they are, all resolutions would be a foregone conclusion," he said. "The five (southern) members are determined to vote as a block -- to me this is just not acceptable, it makes nonsense of the whole process."

Aid agencies estimate some 2 million people died in Sudan's north-south conflict over oil, religion, ethnicity and ideology. The war destabilized much of east Africa.

Khalil said of the 63 positions outlined in the Referendum Law, 59 had already been filled by southerners. He said he had left the problem for the presidency to decide.

"I am not prepared to head a commission that works this way," he said.

The former rebel turned semi-autonomous south Sudan's ruling party Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) blames the ruling National Congress Party (NCP) for years of delay leaving the commission with just six months to prepare for the vote.

SPLM official Pagan Amum said Khalil showed "tendencies of dictatorship" for ignoring the majority opinion in the body.

"If these problems are not resolved quickly the referendum commission will definitely fail to deliver on organizing the referendum," he added.

The SPLM has warned if the referendum is delayed, the southern parliament would decide another plan for southerners to exercise their right to self-determination.

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