KHARTOUM: Sudan began registration yesterday for its first elections since the south of the country won independence, but many voters said they would ignore polls they believe are guaranteed to extend the 25-year rule of President Omar Hassan Al Bashir.
Wanted by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity, Bashir had promised to step down in April’s presidential and parliamentary elections.
But the ruling National Congress Party named him on Saturday as its presidential candidate, dashing hopes that the vote would mark a new start for a country facing diplomatic isolation, economic sanctions and armed insurrection in five provinces.
Some Sudanese, alarmed by the chaos that has engulfed Libya and Syria, say they would prefer stagnation under Bashir to an unknown future if he stepped aside. Even so, they may not bother to sign up to parliamentary and presidential elections whose results they say are a foregone conclusion.
“I will not participate because they are not free elections. The outcome is known and Bashir is the next president,” 70-year-old pensioner Ibrahim Ali said after Bashir’s renomination.
Bashir, a former military commander who rules in an alliance with hardline Islamists, has contested three elections since coming to power in 1989.
He won 68 percent of the vote in the last polls in 2010, according to government figures, though international monitors cast doubt on the fairness of that election.
This time, the economy will play a much bigger role for those who choose to go to the polls. Sudan’s economy has been in free fall since the oil-rich southern third of the country seceded in 2011 and the government has slashed services and subsidies as its foreign exchange reserves shrink.
With inflation at 40 percent, voters are concerned with finding jobs and feeding their families.
“I am sure the elections will not change anything in my life and will not provide us with jobs after graduation,” university student Samia Ibrahim said. “Bashir is the next president and my voice does not mean anything. Can anyone but Bashir win?”
With the three main opposition parties boycotting the elections along with smaller liberal and communist parties, many are asking the same question. Candidate registration will take place at the end of December, when it will become clearer who will participate.
Reuters