Southern Sudanese have been steadily trickling back home from their
country’s northern region ahead of next week’s historic election, the
U.N. refugee agency said.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said an average of 2,000
people are crossing from the north into the south every day. The number
of returnees has doubled since mid-December and now stands at 120,000,
the UNHCR said in a news release.
Several million people in the African nation of Sudan will be going
to the polls to vote on whether the autonomous region of Southern Sudan
should become an independent country or remain part of Sudan.
“We anticipate that many more will return in the coming months
following the referendum. Many of the returnees who have lived in the
North for years say they have left for fear of the unknown and the
opportunity to start afresh in their native South,” the UNHCR said.
Southern Sudan capable of independence?
Since early last year UNHCR established a presence in the ten states of Southern Sudan to support returnees.
The agency said about 30 percent of them have traveled to urban
centers and others to rural areas. Most of the returnees are from
Khartoum — the capital of Sudan — where some of them have lived for two
generations.
“As a result they do not necessarily have a home village to return
to, but having lived in an urban environment they are settling in South
Sudan’s urban centers. This puts additional pressure on the fragile
infrastructure of South Sudan’s towns and has prompted UNHCR to focus
its attention on these urban returns. We are providing assistance to
35,000 returnees in and around the town of Abyei, with stocks in the
South for more than 100,000, should they be needed,” the agency said.
One region that has received many returnees is the Upper Nile.
“Every day, buses and barges with returnees arrive in the state
capital, Malakal. They have come with everything they own. The buses and
barges are packed with beds, sofa seats, chairs, tables, cooking pans
and utensils, corrugated iron sheets, radio sets, and some have even
come with TV sets, fridges and small generators.”
While other agencies have noted the return, the International Rescue
Committee said in a statement it is concerned about the fate of
southerners who stay in the north.
The agency said it is important that “the status of those southern
Sudanese who would prefer to remain in the North is established.”
“We are concerned about the spectre of a significant number of
southerners in the North having uncertain citizen status, possibly
becoming stateless. We are actively supporting negotiations with
officials to address this issue, which if left unresolved could result
in an even larger movement south. There are an estimated 1.5 -2 million
southerners who live in the North.”
From January 9 to January 15, the black Christians and animists in
the autonomous region of Southern Sudan will vote on whether to declare
independence from a northern government dominated by Arab Muslims. The
two sides fought a war that killed 2 million people from 1983 to 2005,
when a peace treaty set the stage for the upcoming vote.
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