Sudan unmoved on oil region row despite U.S. offer

* Abyei vote deadlock continues

* U.S. terror list removal won’t change Abyei vote stand

* Abyei vote looking unlikely to be held Jan. 9

By Opheera McDoom

KHARTOUM, Nov 8 (Reuters) – Sudan refused on Monday to back

down over a disputed referendum in an oil-producing region,

despite a U.S. offer to drop Khartoum from a terror blacklist

provided it goes ahead on schedule alongside a secession vote.

U.S. officials said on Sunday that Washington would remove

Sudan from its list of state sponsors of terrorism by July 2011

if the referendum in Abyei region was held on time on Jan. 9,

when southern Sudan is due to vote on whether to become an

independent nation.

Both referendums were promised under a 2005 north-south

peace deal ending Africa’s longest civil war. But arrangements

for the Abyei vote on whether to join north or south Sudan are

hotly contested by the two former warring sides, raising fears

that it would be delayed and provoke a new conflict.

The dispute centres on the Missiriya people, Arab nomads who

travel through Abyei a few months a year to graze their cattle.

The northern ruling National Congress Party (NCP) believes

they should vote whereas the former southern rebel Sudan

People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) says the tribe as a bloc are

not resident and cannot participate in the Abyei referendum.

NO PRIZE ON EARTH

Ibrahim Ghandour, a senior NCP official, made clear the

deadlock stands which means Abyei’s vote is unlikely to happen

on time.

“No prize on earth, the terror list … or whatever will

persuade the NCP to accept that the Missiriya or any other

people of Abyei be denied their rights to participate in the

referendum,” he told Reuters.

Many of the Missiriya were mobilised by the NCP to fight

against the south during the civil war. They are likely to vote

for unity to protect their grazing rights, possibly tipping the

vote in the region.

Many people fear that Abyei, a flashpoint of north-south

fighting during a ceasefire violation in 2008, will provoke a

new conflict if it is  unresolved before the southern vote,

which most analysts expect to result in secession.

The SPLM have said a settlement could be reached by annexing

Abyei to the south, giving the Missiriya citizenship rights and

offering a financial compensation package to the north to soften

the economic blow of southern secession.

More than half of Sudan’s oil output of 470,000 barrels per

day comes from the south which will want to keep the full

proceeds if it becomes an independent state.

“There is no way to annexe Abyei to the south without a

referendum,” Ghandour said, but he added that the NCP was open

to some form of settlement if it protected the rights of all

citizens of the oil-producing region.

Preparations for the southern referendum have also been

delayed and the commission planning the vote has cut many

corners to prepare a tight schedule with voter registration

beginning on Nov. 15.

Distracted by Abyei, the two sides have largely neglected

other pressing disputes over defining citizenship, demarcating

the north-south border and dividing Sudan’s assets and a massive

external debt of more than $36 billion.

Sudan’s north-south conflict claimed some 2 million lives

mostly through hunger and disease and destabilised much of east

Africa.

(Reporting by Opheera McDoom; editing by David Stamp)

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