Publication
Mar 2010
Sudan faces the prospect of renewed violence between north and south over the next twelve to eighteen months. Under the terms of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended Sudan’s bloody civil war, which claimed two million lives and displaced four million more, a referendum in southern Sudan must be held by January 2011 to determine whether it remains united with the north or secedes from it. Given that popular sentiment in the south overwhelmingly favors secession, two basic scenarios are conceivable: the south secedes peacefully through a credible referendum process, or the CPA collapses and the south fights for independence.
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English (PDF, 11 pages, 114 KB) |
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Author | Katherine Almquist |
Series | CFR Contingency Planning Memoranda |
Issue | 7 |
Publisher | Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) |
Copyright | © 2010 Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) |