Salva Kiir does not have the national appeal of his predecessor
John Garang |
South Sudan leader Salva Kiir is to seek re-election in that
post rather than tackling Omar al-Bashir for the national presidency, his party
says.
The SPLM will instead field a northern Muslim, Yassir Arman, in the national
elections due in April.
The BBC's James Copnall in Khartoum says this is where the party's priorities
lie - in the south.
The SPLM ended its two-decade war with the north in 2005 and joined a unity
government but tensions are high.
A referendum is due next year on whether the oil-rich south should become
independent.
Our correspondent says the south and the north have been divided for many
years on cultural, religious and ethnic grounds, among others, and the south is
likely to vote to secede from the north.
The April poll will be the first genuine multi-party national elections since
1986.
Our correspondent says more than three-quarters of the population live in the
north, so it is likely that a northern candidate will win the election.
Mr Kiir also does not have the broad national support the late SPLM leader
John Garang enjoyed, our reporter says.
Mr Arman is already the SPLM leader in the north but President Bashir, who
faces an international arrest warrant over alleged war crimes in Darfur, is
considered likely to be re-elected.
Mr Bashir was officially nominated for the presidential poll on Tuesday.
Mr Arman told the BBC's Network Africa programme he was up to the challenge.
"I'm confident the SPLM would win in the south, and at the national level."
Under the peace deal, the SPLM already runs the semi-autonomous south.
The elections have been described by the UN as some of the most complicated
ever.
All Sudanese will vote for a president, parliament and state governors, while
southerners will also vote for their regional president and parliament.
Our correspondent says that if re-elected as southern leader, Mr Kiir would
be well placed to become leader of the new country, if the south does vote for
independence.
After years of conflict, Southern Sudan is one of the poorest areas of the
world.
Last year, some 2,000 people died in conflicts in the region, which the SPLM
say are being stirred up by allies of Mr Bashir in order to destabilise the
region ahead of the elections.
Mr Bashir's National Congress Party has denied the charges.
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