Somaliland

SUDAN-SOMALIA: Referendum outcome worries Somalis in South

January 10, 2011   ·   3 Comments

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The question on the minds of many Somalis and other Muslims living in Southern Sudan is: should the ongoing referendum result in secession, what will happen to them?

“We are worried about our future after secession because Somalis are considered pro-Northern Sudan because we are all Muslims,” Ahmed Mohamed, a Somali businessman in Juba, capital of Southern Sudan, told IRIN.

“I am from Somaliland [a self-declared independent republic in Somalia], which has a lot of similarities with the Southern Sudan, but we are Muslims. Southern Sudanese people have sensitive thoughts about Islam, because they consider it a tool used for their oppression by the Northern Sudan government in the last decades.”

Ibrahim Abdalla Sheikh, an imam at a mosque in Juba, said he hoped Muslims were not in any danger.

“More than 30 percent of the Bari community in Southern Sudan are Muslim and we hope nothing will happen to us whether or not the South becomes an independent state,” he said. “Of course Islam is the largest religion in [Northern] Sudan, but in the South we are the minority.”

It is expected that the Southern population will vote overwhelmingly for secession in the referendum that began on 9 January.

There are an estimated 5,000 Somalis living and working in Southern Sudan. Many have businesses, mostly dealing in food and fuel.

Mohamed Ali, a Somali shopkeeper in Juba, said: “We are worried that if Southern Sudan separates from the rest of Sudan, the Southerners may say, ‘Somalis have taken our businesses’, as has happened in South Africa.”

However, Dr Barnaba Marial Benjamin, Minister of Information for Southern Sudan, assured the Somalis and other Africans in the region they would be safe.

“Somalis and other Africans who have businesses here will have nothing to worry about whether we get our independence or not,” he said.

Somalis fleeing the civil war at home have established businesses in many parts of Africa, particularly in Kenya. Many Somalis have suffered xenophobic attacks in South Africa.

Source: IRIN

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Readers Comments (3)

  1. Awdalboy says:

    The break-up in Sudan has nothing to do with Somalis in my opinion. Somalis can move to other Countries or Northern Sudan area. Muslim community in that region can do other things like establishing particular part in S.Sudan if they feel unsafe and demand the same referendum South Sudanese are doing. At the end, every community who live particular area would be quality referendum and that is democracy. Religions shouldn't be the case where people want to live Allah's given rights to live free regardless of their faith. Let them keep their faith and you keep yours(Lakum Diinakum Waliyo Diin)

  2. Awdalboy says:

    Sorry, I mean every community would be qualified referendum until the world get 400 Countries.

  3. mohamed says:

    I don't know why but as always whatever the IRIN writes has its own problems. Look for example what it says about Somaliland. Quote Ahmed Mohamed a Somali businessman in Juba, the Capital of Southern Sudan told IRIN..I am from Somaliland(a self-declared independent Republic in Somalia) which has a lot of similarities with the southern Sudan unquote In all fairness isn't the Somaliland issue much different than how the IRIN categorized! But then when was it the IRIN said something positive about the S/land affairs. That said, I would rather let the Sudan and its people to sort out their problematically troubling differences of their great African country..however it's too early to tell how everything will work out to be nice and clean.
    Cheers.


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