Publication

2 Sep 2010

The January 2011 referendum on self-determination could result in Sudan’s partition, and the country’s North-South border may ultimately become the world’s newest international boundary. The 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) that ended two decades of civil war called for the border between the North and the semi-autonomous South to be demarcated within six months. Five years later, the task remains incomplete. The sooner the parties break the border deadlock the better, though the process need not necessarily be completed prior to the referendum as Khartoum has argued previously.

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Author International Crisis Group
Series Crisis Group Africa Briefings
Issue 75
Publisher International Crisis Group (ICG)
Copyright © 2010 International Crisis Group (Crisis Group)
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