Africa

Sudan poll short of world standards

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Chief EU observer Veronique De Keyser speaks during a news conference in Khartoum April 17, 2010. Sudan's first multi-party elections in 24 years fell short of international standards, two international observation missions said on Saturday. Reuters

Chief EU observer Veronique De Keyser speaks during a news conference in Khartoum April 17, 2010. Sudan's first multi-party elections in 24 years fell short of international standards, two international observation missions said on Saturday. Reuters 

By Reuters
Posted  Sunday, April 18  2010 at  11:57

KHARTOUM, Sunday - Sudan's first multi-party elections in 24 years fell short of international standards, two international observation missions said on Saturday in the first authoritative judgments on the poll.

Final results of the presidential and legislative ballots, which had been intended to turn Sudan into a democratic state after years of war, are due on Tuesday.

President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, who seized power in a bloodless coup in 1989, is widely expected to win, most of his rivals having boycotted the proceedings, accusing him of vote rigging.

"These elections have struggled to reach international standards. They have not reached them all," the head of the European Union observer mission in Sudan, Veronique de Keyser, told reporters.

"It is apparent that the elections will fall short of meeting international standards and Sudan's obligations for genuine elections in many respects," said a statement from the US Carter Center.

The preliminary statements will be a blow to Bashir who, analysts say, is looking for an internationally recognised win to legitimise his rule and fend off International Criminal Court charges that he masterminded war crimes in Sudan's western Darfur region.

International standards

The elections were set up under a 2005 peace deal that ended more than two decades of north-south war in the oil producing state and also promised southerners a 2011 referendum on whether they should split off and become an independent country.

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A member of Sudan's National Elections Commission defended the election, saying it was not surprising there had been problems given the country's war-torn history.

"We cannot be expected to meet international standards -- we are a country just emerging from the war with very little electoral experience ... We have tried our best as a commission," Philister Baya Lowiri told Reuters.

De Keyser said there had been "significant deficiencies" including logistical problems and intimidation.

Opposition parties had been free to voice complaints throughout the process, she added, praising the enthusiasm of voters and polling staff. Overall turnout would be around 60 percent, she said.

The elections as a whole were marred by complexity and confusion and dominated by the ruling parties in the north and south, the EU's preliminary statement said.

"The elections in the south experienced a high incidence of intimidation and the threat or use of force ... State interference in the campaigns of opposition candidates was widespread in the south," the Carter statement said.

A separate mission from the European Parliament echoed many of the concerns but said the polls were still a step forward in the 2005 peace process.

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