Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Following the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, elections initially did not play a role in determining the composition of the interim national government, the South Sudan government, or the state legislatures. [3] An out of date national census and, in the case of South Sudan, a complete lack of infrastructure for conducting an election, rendered ...
Several Sudanese election plans followed the Sudanese Revolution of 2019, starting with a plan to hold elections in July 2023 under the 2019 Draft Constitutional Declaration. [1] [2] The December 2022 "Framework Agreement" between civilian and military groups in Sudan scheduled a two-year transition to be followed by elections.
General elections were held in Sudan between 11 and 15 April 2010, extended from the original end date of 13 April. [1] [2] [3] The elections were held to elect the President and National Assembly of Sudan, as well as the President and Legislative Assembly of Southern Sudan.
1980 Sudanese parliamentary election; 1981–82 Sudanese parliamentary election; 1986 Sudanese parliamentary election; 1996 Sudanese general election; 2000 Sudanese general election; 2010 Southern Sudanese general election; 2010 Sudanese general election; 2010 Sudanese general election in Jonglei; 2010 Sudanese gubernatorial elections; 2015 ...
The elections were boycotted by pro-Egyptian parties such as the National Front, leaving only the Umma Party and the Independence Front (which opposed union with Egypt) to contest the elections. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] Demonstrations led to the deaths of 10 deaths and 100 injured.
General elections were held in Sudan to elect a President and National Assembly between 2 and 17 March 1996. They were the first elections since 1986 due to a military coup in 1989, and the first simultaneous elections for the presidency and National Assembly. 125 members of the 400-seat National Assembly had been nominated before the election, leaving 275 seats to be elected (of which 51 were ...
The election took place amidst the Second Sudanese Civil War, and voting was postponed indefinitely in 41 seats in Southern Sudan due to security concerns. [1] [2] Voter turnout was 67.5%. [3] The election was among the freest and fairest elections in Africa up to that time. [1] To date, these are the last free elections held in Sudan.
Parliamentary elections were held in Sudan on 27 February and 8 March 1958. [1] The first elections since independence in 1956, they were supposed to be held in August 1957, but were postponed by the ruling council, who claimed that flooding would affect the vote. [2] The result was a victory for the Umma Party, which won 63 of the 173 seats.