Your Voice Your Vote 2024

Live results
Last Updated: April 23, 10:42:16PM ET

Elections Today

Pennsylvania

Recent Projections

StateCandidate
Delegates
Donald Trump
Joe Biden

South Sudanese Celebrate Freedom Before Vote

Region expects to be free of Islamic north after votes are counted.

ByABC News
January 10, 2011, 2:54 PM

JUBA, Sudan Jan. 10, 2011 -- More than 20 police officers were killed and 30 others wounded in an attack by Arab militia-men in the disputed border region of Abyei as voting began on an independence referendum for South Sudan, officials said today.

A military spokesman told reporters the tribesmen used anti-tank weapons and artillery, indicating they were being supported by north Sudan's military. Khartoum has denied the allegation.

Abyei, oil-rich region which straddles the border between north and south Sudan, is considered a flashpoint in the negotiations over South Sudan independence. It was supposed to hold a separate vote over whether it would stay part of Sudan or become part of the new South Sudan, but disputes over territory and voter population have blocked the election from happening.

Actor George Clooney recently visited Abyei while in Sudan to monitor the vote. Clooney and John Prendergrast of the Enough Project have been calling attention to the possibility of violence surrounding this referendum for the last year, even helping to fund the Sudan Sentinel project which uses satellite technology to try and monitor military build-ups on the border and human rights abuses.

"If you listen to the State Department, if you listen to the intelligence agencies, if you listen to the president of the United States, if you listen to any analyst here...this place has the greatest chance to be the largest conventional war of the 21st century," Clooney told ABC News. "We're trying to stop a war before it starts."

Results won't be announced until next month, but that hasn't stopped the nearly 4 million southerners from celebrating the independence they believe they are assured to win.

Signs all over South Sudan's capital Juba are pro-separation, and anti-Khartoum. "Bye Bye Bashir" read one banner, referring to the Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir. The long standing animosity between the Islamic north and the largely Christian and animist south has fueled a 20-year civil war that killed more than 2 million people.

South Sudan Celebrates Freedom They Expect to Win in This Week's Vote

Stephen Thot fought with the Sudan People's Liberation Movement, known as the SPLM, more than two decades ago. After losing an eye in a gun battle, he left Sudan and became a refugee, eventually settling in Lincoln, Neb.

Thot says he was living a nice life in the United States with his wife and five children, working in a church. But then the unexpected happened – a peace agreement was signed between the Khartoum government and the SPLM in 2005. He knew he had to come home and fight for his country again, only this time with vote instead of a gun.

"I even told the Americans when I had my interview to go there that when there is peace in my country I will go back," says Thot.

Countless southerners have stories of repression they've experienced at the hands of their northern counterparts. Thousands who were living in north have packed up all of their belongings and returned. The UN estimates that at least 2,000 southerners are returning every day. Most have no jobs, no place to live and very few prospects for a better life. Still, they say it's better than what they left behind.