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  • As we speak, Pro-Russian separatists are trying to secede from Ukraine. The Kurdish Regional

  • Government is trying to secede from Iraq. And Scotland has a vote scheduled in September

  • that may result in their seceding from the UK. Secession is in the air, and it brings

  • up an important question. If the people of a particular region want to secede, why can’t

  • they?

  • There are a lot of ways you could argue this question, but the simplest answer is this.

  • Dissatisfaction in a nation’s leaders, its economy, or its Government isn’t enough

  • to secede. You need much more than that. To illustrate this point, let’s look at South

  • Sudan and how they successfully seceded from Sudan in 2011.

  • Sudan has a history of conflict between the Muslim majority in the north, and the non-Muslim

  • minority in the Sub-Saharan south. It was the South that won the right to secede in

  • 2011.

  • They did this by having an established cultural group and region; a history of being institutionally

  • marginalized; an independent representative system of government. And the economic means

  • to establish and protect their new state, without bankrupting the other state through

  • secession.

  • Those last points, were earned in the Second Sudanese Civil War, which ended in a peace

  • agreement that formally established a representative body for South Sudan. It also created a plan

  • for Oil Revenue splitting between North and South, and a plan for federal job sharing

  • countrywide.

  • They also needed to prove that there was no better alternative to secession; a point well

  • made by 50+ years of conflicts and all out war in the region.

  • Even then, meeting just those requirements isn’t enough. You still need wide support

  • among your cultural group and region. You need comparable support from the nation youre

  • leaving. And you need support from the international community. If any of that is not going your

  • way, you won’t be granted secession.

  • Luckily, for South Sudan, all of that did fall into place - and on July 9th, 2011, they

  • won their right to secede, after a secession referendum was voted on earlier that month.

  • Almost 99% of registered voters in South Sudan voted for secession. And almost 58% of registered

  • voters in the North, voted for it. Later that month, the UN officially recognized South

  • Sudan as its own nation.

  • That, in a nutshell, is what you need to secede: a clear culture and region, a history of being

  • marginalized, an organized government, a stable economy, no alternate options for peace, and

  • full support from your group, as well as support from the group youre leaving, and an endorsement

  • from the international community as a whole.

As we speak, Pro-Russian separatists are trying to secede from Ukraine. The Kurdish Regional

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新國家如何獲得獨立 (How New Countries Gain Independence)

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    Minjane 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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