Sudan's Legislature Passes Constitution

Khartoum, Sudan - Sudan's National Assembly passed a new constitution Wednesday that steps away from complete Islamic rule and paves the way for a Christian former rebel leader to be inaugurated as first vice president later this week.

Amid shouts of "Allahu akbar," or God is great, and "Hallelujah, hallelujah!" the 286 lawmakers who attended the session stood with their hands in the air to unanimously pass the constitution.

The constitution says Islamic law will not be applied in the mainly Christian and animist south, and removes a requirement that the president be Muslim.

It follows a January peace accord between the government and southern rebels who had fought a two-decade war for more autonomy. The rebel leader, John Garang, will be sworn in as the country's top vice president Saturday. It will be the first time a Christian is appointed as first vice president, a position second only to the president.

The new constitution is the first Sudanese charter to lay out freedoms of religion and expression as human rights.

"The State of Sudan is an embracing homeland, wherein races and cultures coalesce and religions conciliate," reads the first sentence of the document.

While stating that the majority of Sudanese are Muslims, it notes that "Christianity and customary creeds have considerable followers."

"This is a call for tolerance and for siding with the people, with the man in the street," Vice President Ali Osman Mohammed Taha told lawmakers after the vote. "We have passed a constitution ending 50 years of civil war that produced grudges, produced tragedies, produced widows and orphans and retarded our economy and fanned hatred."

He said the constitution would help overcome the past — Sudan has faced civil wars for most of the years since it gained independence from Egypt and Britain in 1956 — and give the government a chance to focus on improving the living conditions of its people.

"We want to lead the war against poverty, provide better services and spread education," Taha said. "We want to go out to the world give it our best and take the best the world has to offer."

In another first, the constitution also allows women as well as men to pass on Sudanese nationality to their children. The new constitution provides for a coalition government, wealth and power sharing and democratic elections within three years.

The south will also have a referendum on secession after six years.

Although the southern civil war was fueled by historical disputes and competition for oil and other resources, religion played a large role and was an issue during peace talks.

The talks stalled once over rebel insistences that the capital, Khartoum, should not fall under Islamic law. The rebels eventually yielded on that point, with the understanding that non-Muslims would not be harassed — as they have been in the past — in Khartoum.