海角大神

Sudan President Bashir threatens to expel foreign election observers

Ahead of April 11 parliamentary and president elections, Sudan President Omar al-Bashir told supporters that if foreign election observers 'interfere in our affairs, we will cut their fingers off, put them under our shoes, and throw them out.'

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Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/Reuters
A Sudanese policeman guards election boxes and kits inside a warehouse in Khartoum March 17. Sudan will hold its first multi-party elections in 24 years in April.
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Albert Gonzalez Farran/UNAMID/Reuters
Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir (l.) arrives at El Fasher International Airport, north Darfur, February 24. He threatened to expel foreign election observers if they interfere with the upcoming April 11 elections.

Sudan President Omar al-Bashir has threatened to expel foreign election observers for 鈥渋nterference鈥 after a prominent US-based observer mission suggested 鈥渕inor delays鈥 to the April 11 election date to create better conditions for free and fair presidential and parliamentary elections.

The Atlanta-based Carter Center, which is one of many groups invited by Mr. Bashir's government to observe the country's vote 鈥 said that the election process thus far was 鈥渕ostly peaceful鈥 but warned that 鈥渢he process remains at risk on multiple fronts including the ability of candidates to campaign freely,鈥 and suggested that elections be delayed briefly.

"It is increasingly unclear if the [National Election Commission] can deliver a successful election on time," the said.

Bashir: 'We will cut their fingers off'

In response, Bashir issued his own warning.

鈥淲e brought these organizations from outside to monitor the elections, but if they ask for them to be delayed, we will throw them out,鈥 he said at an election rally in the eastern Sudanese city of Port Sudan. 鈥淎ny foreigner or organization that demands the delay of elections will be expelled sooner rather than later. We wanted them to see the free and fair elections, but if they interfere in our affairs, we will cut their fingers off, put them under our shoes, and throw them out."

Few elections in Sudan have as much riding on them as do the upcoming April 11 elections. The first truly multiparty elections since 1986 will determine the new president of the country, the president of South Sudan's semi-autonomous government, delegates to the National Assembly, 25 state assemblies (and the South Sudanese assembly), and 25 governorships.

This vote is seen as a crucial test of a January 2005 peace agreement between mainly Arabic northern Sudan and mainly 海角大神 southern Sudan, which fought a two-decade long civil war that claimed the lives of some 1.9 million people.

If southern Sudanese do not feel that this election is fair, they will almost certainly secede from Khartoum鈥檚 control in a referendum, scheduled for 2011. Maintaining the current pace of events is crucial, experts say.

Part of a sensitive peace process

鈥淭his election is not to be taken in isolation; this is part of a process that includes a referendum over secession, and that process is inalterable,鈥 says John Ryle, chairman of the Rift Valley Institute, a London-based think tank that focuses on east African issues. 鈥淚f the referendum is not held, there could be a war.鈥

The Carter Center's report is not provocative, either in its language or its message. But President Bashir, who came to power in an Islamist-party backed coup in 1989, has long portrayed himself as a nationalist keen to protect Sudan鈥檚 sovereignty, and within the past year he has expelled foreign aid organizations from the country for 鈥渟pying鈥 in the troubled Darfur region.

Crimes against humanity?

Mr. Bashir is currently facing charges of crimes against humanity, issued by the International Criminal Court, for his direction of a counter-insurgency campaign in the western Sudanese region of Darfur, where some 300,000 people have been killed, and another 2.7 million have been forced out of their homes by conflict.

Human rights organizations such as Human Rights Watch have warned that Bashir鈥檚 government continues to harass opposition candidates, and that opposition members do not have access to state run media in the same way that ruling party candidates do.

But Ibrahim Gambari, the head of the joint United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur, told the Associated Press that security would not be 鈥渁 major consideration,鈥 given that voter registration 鈥 even in insecure areas such as Darfur 鈥 was concluded peacefully, despite rebel calls for boycotts.

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