Thursday 30 September 2010

ARCHBISHOP’S SUPORT OF SUDAN PROCESS

The Archbishop of Armagh has issued a statemesupporting Archbisho Deng of the Sudan in his concerns for the forthcoming elctions in 2011.
Archbishop Alan Harper states,”In 2005 a Comprehensive Peace Agreement was signed ending 23 years of warfare in Southern Sudan resulting in the death of 1.9 million people and the displacement of 4 million. One of the key provisions of that agreement was a commitment to hold a referendum in Southern Sudan to determine whether the south of the country should separate from the north and become a separate, independent state. That referendum is due to be held on 9 January 2011. The vote is now less than 100 days away.
‘The Sudanese peace process is therefore at a critical point. In April 2010 the first multi-party electoral process in 24 years was completed. The referendum in Southern Sudan together with associated consultations in the Nuba Mountains and Blue Nile border regions are at hand

‘Archbishop Deng informs me that “…there are aspects of the CPA that have not yet been fully implemented including the demarcation of the 1st January 1956 borders” as required in the judgement of the International Court of Arbitration at the Hague. The Church of Sudan is fearful that the registration of voters will not be fairly carried out; that the rights of people in the Nuba Mountains and Blue Nile will not be respected; and that internally displaced southerners currently living the North will be denied citizenship.

‘Therefore, having most particularly in mind the safety, livelihoods and rights of the poorest and most vulnerable people, I join Archbishop Deng in calling upon the international guarantor governments, signatory to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement of 2005, to ensure full implementation of the agreement including a free and fair referendum. I also call upon people everywhere, and especially in the Church of Ireland, to pray for our brothers and sisters in Sudan. Pray especially that Sudan may not fall back into a war which will destroy more lives and communities bringing further misery to a land that has seen so much horror in the recent past.’

Most active links between Ireland and Sudan have been established over recent years through CSMI and Can Cecil Wison’s endeavours, as well as diocesan and Mothers’ Union links.

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