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Majak says she wants to return eventually, but not until her children
-- the eldest of whom is 9 -- finish this school year at least. She says she also has a good job, working in a restaurant kitchen in Khartoum. But for however long she stays, she worries about reprisals against her children. "There will be many problems, and there will be envy. I will fear for them. There is no safety," said Majak, her hair and shoulders covered with the scarf she wears to fit in with the Muslim northerners. Northerners and southerners have clashed in the past. After the 2005 death of the south's iconic leader John Garang in a plane crash, southerners in the north protested, suspecting it was an assassination. The protests sparked ethnic violence that left nearly 50 people killed, homes torched and properties damaged. The government beefed up security around Khartoum and elsewhere in the north ahead of the referendum, and there have been no reports of violence here so far. Father John Denghi, parish priest of Khartoum's Catholic Saint Matthew Cathedral, said his church is stocking up supplies in case violence breaks out and people seek refuge. Further fanning anxiety are President Omar al-Bashir's repeated vows to step up enforcement of Islamic Shariah law if the south secedes. Denghi fears Christians may be targeted or church lands seized by the government. "I am sure if Shariah law is implemented all the women will be covering their faces," he said. "It is worrying because we are not sure of the future."
Government and ruling party officials dismiss those fears. But they say that southerners employed by the government
-- about 20 percent of the government work force in accordance with the peace accord's provisions
-- will be removed from their jobs, if the two nations separate. The officials are also firm that southerners will not be granted dual citizenship. It's not clear if that means southerners will be given a choice or if their Sudanese nationality will simply be taken away. All that is being discussed in ongoing negotiations. The prospect of arbitrary stripping of nationality is worrying to many. The U.N. refugee agency warns that if left unresolved, the issue could spark even larger movement south.) "There will be no dual nationality. There may be reciprocal arrangements ... Nobody will be without a nationality, but (it will be) given according to the national interest of the country," Ibrahim Ghandour, a senior ruling party official said. Many northerners, meanwhile, are stunned at the prospect of losing a large chunk of the country. "This is a part of our body being torn away," Mohamed al-Hafez, a 22-year old northern university student, said. "I just can't imagine this separation. Politicians have been trying to prepare us but I am really upset ... For us, Sudan is still one."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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