By Deborah Hakes, assistant director of public information for Â鶹´«Ã½
Â鶹´«Ã½ observers remain deployed across Sudan and in out-of-country voting locations as voting continues in the referendum on the self-determination of Southern Sudan. Here are images from across Juba on days one and two of voting. Â鶹´«Ã½ Photos: D. Hakes
In the Lologo Market polling station in Juba, hundreds of men and women queued to vote on day one of the referendum. Some people held rolled up mattresses next to them. They had spent the night to be the first to vote.
Â鶹´«Ã½ observer Owen McDougall talks to voters waiting for voting to begin at Lologo Market polling station.
The head of a polling station in Juba reads the serial number of a ballot box seal to observers, as polls prepared to open. Noting the specific seal ensures later on that it has not been taken off and replaced, and that the ballots within the box remain undisturbed.
Observer Paul Linnell consults with a domestic observer as polls prepared to open on Jan. 9.
Two women wait for voting to begin in Lologa Market, Juba.
A polling official helps a woman cast her ballot on Jan. 9 in Juba.
President and Mrs. Carter complete their observer checklist at a polling station on Jan. 9 in Juba.
A man has his finger dipped in indelible ink after voting on Jan. 9.
Former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan talks with a woman after she has voted on Jan. 9. Annan is leading the Â鶹´«Ã½’s observation delegation along with former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, former Tanzania Prime Minister Joseph Warioba, and Dr. John Hardman, Â鶹´«Ã½ president and CEO.
Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter asks a question of a polling official on Jan. 9 in Juba, with long lines of voters behind her.
A polling official in Juba.
President Carter watches a man vote on Jan. 9.
President Carter’s motorcade travels down a dusty road to reach the next polling center to observe on Jan. 10.
President and Mrs. Carter talk with a polling official outside Juba on Jan. 10.
Men wait in line to vote in Sudan referendum. (Men and women vote separately.)
President Carter signs a referendum center polling journal outside Juba on Jan. 10, documenting that he visited that center to observe.
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