I think that we can be quite
optimistic about this countries future.
They are properly in the orbit of Kenya and do have excellent oil
prospects as well. Besides, the land is
fertile and productive.
The Northern
Sudan is another matter and seems embroiled in Islamic jihads from
our rather distant perspective and may even break up some more. War does that you
know.
Otherwise, refugees from the
North have a place to escape to in the Southern Sudan
now.
I do not expect the warfare in
the North to end yet but this is actually a major step to settling the
situation.
In the meantime the explosion of economic
growth in Kenya
and surrounds will drive change in this new nation and it may well be a case of
great timing.
8 July 2011 Last updated at 19:19 ET
The BBC's Will Ross describes the celebrations in the capital Juba
South Sudan has become the world's newest nation, the climax of a
process made possible by the 2005 peace deal that ended a long and bloody civil
war.
The south's independence follows decades of conflict with the north in
which some 1.5 million people died.
Celebrations in Juba began at midnight
(2100 GMT). A countdown clock in the city centre reached zero and the new
national anthem was played on television.
South Sudan became the 193rd country recognised by the UN and the 54th
UN member state in Africa .
The BBC's Will Ross in Juba says the
new country's problems have been put aside for the night amid an air of great
jubilation.
People were in the streets, cheering, waving South
Sudan flags, banging drums and chanting the name of President
Salva Kiir Mayardit, he adds.
A formal independence ceremony is due to be held later on Saturday.
The Speaker of the South Sudan Legislative Assembly, James Wani Igga,
is expected to read out the Proclamation of the Independence of South Sudan at
1145 (0845 GMT). Minutes later Sudan 's
national flag will be lowered and the new flag of South
Sudan will be raised.
In addition to Mr Bashir and Mr Ban, attendees will include former US Secretary of State Colin Powell, the US permanent representative to the UN, Susan
Rice, and the head of the US
military's Africa Command, Gen Carter Ham.
Under the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, a referendum was held on
independence, which was favoured by more than 99% of voters.
The new country is rich in oil, but one of the least developed
countries in the world, where one in seven children dies before the age of
five.
Unresolved disputes between the north and south, particularly over the
new border, have also raised the possibility of renewed conflict.
On Friday, Sudan's Minister of Presidential Affairs, Bakri Hassan
Saleh, announced that it recognised "the Republic of South Sudan as an
independent state, according to the borders existing on 1 January 1956",
when Sudan gained independence from Britain.
President Bashir, who agreed the 2005 peace deal with the Sudan
People's Liberation Army (SPLA), stressed his country's "readiness to work
with our southern brothers and help them set up their state so that, God
willing, this state will be stable and develop".
"The co-operation between us will be excellent, particularly when
it comes to marking and preserving the border so there is a movement of
citizens and goods via this border," he told journalists in Khartoum .
Fears of fresh conflict resurfaced after recent fighting in two border
areas, Abyei and South Kordofan , which forced
some 170,000 people from their homes.
But separate deals - and the withdrawal of rival forces from the border
- have calmed tensions.
The UN Security Council has passed a resolution approving a new
7,000-strong peacekeeping force for South Sudan - but this is basically a
rebranding of the force which was already in Sudan, mostly in the south.
Our correspondent says keeping both the north and the south stable long
after the celebratory parties have ended will be a mighty challenge.
lick to play
All you need to know about South Sudan 's
independence
The two sides must still decide on issues such as drawing up the new
border and how to divide Sudan 's
debts and oil wealth.
Analysts say the priority for Khartoum
will be to negotiate a favourable deal on oil revenue, as most oilfields lie in
the south. At present, the revenues are being shared equally.
Khartoum has some leverage, as most of the oil pipelines flow north to Port Sudan on the Red Sea .
Citizenship is also a key issue which has not yet been decided.
A new law passed by the National Assembly in Khartoum has withdrawn Sudanese citizenship
from all southerners.
The UN refugee agency (UNCHR), has urged both governments to prevent
statelessness.
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