Archive for March 19, 2014

President Museveni’s Speech: 10 Years of the Pan African Parliament

Posted: March 19, 2014 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Africa, Speeches

Pretoria, South Africa

18th March, 2014.

Your Excellencies,

As I address the Pan African Parliament, I remember two portions from the Christian Scriptures. One is from our Lords’ Prayer. The relevant portion I am interested in says: “Thou shall not lead us into temptation but deliver us from evil.” The other one is from the Book of Isaiah Chapter 11 verse 6. It says: “the Wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the Leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and fatling together; and a little child shall lead them”.

The first quotation prays that we should not be led into temptation. Africa should also not tempt the greedy ones by being weak. The second portion talks about the Kingdom of heaven in paradise where the wolf will peacefully co-exist with the lamb. Unfortunately, we are still here on earth. We are not yet in paradise.

Wolves still eat lambs here. I have, therefore, come here today to talk to you about the wolves and the lambs here on earth.

Africa is a continent of 11.7 million square miles or 30 million square kilometers. It is populated by people who are either similar or linked in terms of language and culture. There are four linguistic groups in Africa. These are: the Niger–Congo group of languages (including the Bantu languages and the Kwa group of languages); the Nilo-Saharan group of languages (Cushitic, Nilotic and Nilo-Harmitic languages); the Afro-Asiatic languages (Arabic, Tigrinya and Amharic); and the Khoisan languages. The population of Africa is now 1,033 billion (one billion thirty three million people).

Africa is the origin of man (5 million years ago), the cradle of civilization (Egyptian Civilization); and the three founders of the three great religions of the World (Christianity, Judaism and Moslem) were harboured by Africa in their early lives. These were Moses, Jesus and Mohammed.

Yet, by 1900, the whole of Africa, except for Ethiopia, had been colonized by the British, the French, the Belgians, the Spanish, the Italians and the Portuguese. Why? It was on account of the political fragmentation Africa found itself in, the fact that her people were either similar or linked notwithstanding. The Chiefdoms and Kingdoms that governed us at that time were simply too weak to defend us. In Uganda, for instance, we had 4 Kingdoms and a number of Chiefdoms. The Kingdoms were: Bunyoro, Buganda, Ankole and Tooro. There were Chiefdoms in Busoga, Lango, Acholi etc. The British were able to conquer them one by one, even using one against the other. It was only towards the end that two of our Kings – Kabalega of Bunyoro and Mwanga of Buganda – tried to unite to fight the British. By that time, it was too late. The British working with Local traitors and also taking advantage of the brutality of some of these Kings, gained the upper hand.

Kabaka (King) Mwanga is the one that killed a total of 47 (forty seven) young Christian converts, between 1885 – 1887; the majority were killed in 1886 by burning them at stake (burning them alive). Were our ancestors conquered on account of guns only? I do not think so because other people without guns, but better organized, were able to defeat the imperialists. These were the Chinese and the Japanese. Even the Ethiopians were able to defeat the Italians at the battle of Adua. It is the scale of the organisation and the use of the terrain that mattered.

The ignominious defeat of old Africa was a vote of No Confidence in that old Africa. Our Chiefs tried to resist but they were all defeated.

The African Peoples are, however, a very resilient people. Unlike the Red Indians of America, the Aztecs of Mexico, the Incas of Peru, the Caribes of the Caribbean or the Aborigines of Australia, the European invasion did not lead to our extermination. In spite of the millions that perished in the slave trade, the millions that died in the colonial wars, or the millions killed by diseases brought by Europeans, the Africans survived.

By 1956, Sudan, the first African country to do so, had got its independence.

How did we achieve this freedom?

What were the factors that helped us?

There were three factors that helped us to get our freedom back:

(i) the continued resistance by the African people, this time led by the African nationalists and not by the tribal chiefs;

(ii) the inter – European wars – the so called 1st and 2nd World Wars – in effect inter – imperialist wars for the re-division of the colonial possessions – i.e. ourselves; and

(iii) the support of Socialist Countries – the Soviet Union, China, Cuba etc.

It was these three factors that forced the Imperialists to retreat in Asia (India, Pakistan, Indonesia, etc.), Africa and the Middle East. That is how we got our Independence, again.

Did we use the Independence to insure ourselves against future recolonization, marginalization and arrogance? The answer is, unfortunately, no. The former Imperialist countries are still messing up Africa by promoting wrong and criminal schemes.

In Uganda, they, for instance, helped the coup of Idi Amin in 1971. That mistake cost Ugandans 800,000 people extra-judicially killed between 1971 and 1986. Lumumba in Congo was killed in 1961. That cost the people of Congo almost 50 years of turmoil which they are now trying to conclude. In Rwanda, the meddling by external forces caused the death of 1 million Africans in 1994.

The meddling has not stopped. During the Libyan crisis, a plane carrying African Heads of States on the AU mission in that crisis, was stopped by NATO planes over African soil!! The African input in the Libyan crisis was totally ignored. Up to now, Libya is in crisis.

There are even attempts to attack the core African values on the family in, for instance, the matter of homosexuals. Indeed, in the West, they, for instance, criminalize polygamy by law. In Africa it is and has always been part of our way of life. Yet we do not complain. When, however, we legislate against homosexuals, in response to the provocation by Western sponsored NGOs vis a vis our traditional values, we are threatened with sanctions. This is all “tharawu” – “contempt” – as we say in Swahili.

Why is Africa still held in contempt?

It is entirely our fault. We have not yet used our tremendous, unequalled potential by converting it into strength. This failure has been on account of failing to detect 10 strategic bottlenecks.

The strategic bottlenecks are the following:

1. Ideological disorientation;

2. Attacking the private sector;

3. Inadequate infrastructure that causes the cost of doing business to be exorbitant;

4. An underdeveloped human resource i.e. an uneducated population which is also in poor health;

5. Small internal markets that cannot stimulate and sustain large scale production by providing adequate demand;

6. Lack of industrialization and continuing to export unprocessed raw-materials whereby we get much less money than those who convert those raw materials into final products and also export jobs to other countries;

7. An undeveloped services sector which phenomenon under-utilizes our huge potential in tourism, transport, banking, etc, etc;

8. Underdeveloped agriculture – in Uganda, through research, we have discovered that farmers can produce 53 tonnes of bananas per hectare instead of the 10 tonnes the peasants have been getting – in Brazil they are already getting 80 tonnes of Bananas per hectare per annum;

9. Lack of democracy;

10. Lack of ideology creating a Criminal State – a State that, for instance, kills people extra-judicially instead of upholding the dignity of the people and their inalienable rights.

On this occasion, I will only comment on just five of these: ideological disorientation; inadequate infrastructure; a small internal market; a criminal state; and lack of industrialization.

Ideological disorientation is caused by failure to accurately define the interests of the people. In the story of the Good Samaritan, in the Book of Luke (10:25-37), Jesus asked his listeners the question you will see in the quotation below:

And a Lawyer stood up and put him to the test, saying, “Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?” And He said to him, “what is written in the Law? How does it read to you? And He answered, “You shall Love your God with all your heart, and with all your Soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind. And your neigbour as yourself.”

Jesus answered; “You have answered correctly: Do this and you will live”

Vs. 29. But wishing to justify himself, he said to Jesus, “And who is your neigbour?”

The Good Samaritan
In Vs 30 Jesus replied and said, “A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and fell among robbers, and they stripped him and beat him, and went away leaving him, half dead. And by chance a Priest was going down on that road, and when he saw him, he passed by on the other side. Likewise, a Levite also, when he came to the place and saw him, he passed by on the other side. But a Samaritan, who was on a journey, came upon him; and when he saw him, he felt compassion, and he came to him and bandaged up his wounds, pouring oil and wine on them; and he put him on his own beast, and brought him to an Inn and took care of him.

On the next day he took out 2 denarii and gave them to the Innkeeper and said, “take care of him; and whatever more you spend when I return I will repay you”; Which of these three do you think proved to be a neigbour to the man who fell into the robbers’ hands? And he said,
“ the one who showed mercy toward him”. Then Jesus said to him, “Go and do the same”.

Similarly, in Africa you find a lot of ideological bankruptcy by groups that push the line of sectarianism by tribe and religion or by discriminating women. These groups fail to accurately define the interest of the People and push pseudo interests instead.

I always like to use the example of my tribe the Banyankore of South Western Uganda. These people are cattle keepers and farmers. They produce milk, beef, bananas and coffee. Farmer A produces Milk and bananas and so does farmer B. A cannot, therefore, buy from B and B cannot buy from A.

What, then, is the value of the tribe to either of them? You find that the saviours of these Banyankore who are stuck with their products are the other Ugandans of Kampala who buy their products.

It is not only the Ugandans who rescue the Banyankore by buying their products; it is also the other Africans in Tanzania, Kenya, Congo, Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan who buy what the Banyankore are producing that makes them prosperous. If, therefore, anybody was so narrow-minded as to care only about the Banyankore, he/she would have to first and foremost love Uganda, love East Africa, Love Africa in order to love the Banyankore.

To say that you love the Banyankore but you hate or do not care about the other Ugandans, is to be bogus – fraudulent. You love neither the Banyankore nor do you love other Africans. You only love yourself.

You are a traitor to the interests of the people of Africa. The only way the Banyankore help me as a producer, since they produce similar products, is to aggregate big volumes so that marketing and processing are easier. In that way my tribe helps me.

In the past the tribal organisation also helped us in breeding strong people by encouraging exogamous marriages – not marrying within your clan. Some of these are still relevant. They should be modernized and used. In our recent IGAD Communiqué in Addis, we strongly denounced the bankruptcy of tribalism and sectarianism. It is the cause of suffering of the people in many African countries – South Sudan, Central African Republic (CAR), Rwanda and Burundi in the past, as well as Uganda in the past.

In Africa we have been asleep on the question of infrastructure – especially electricity, roads, the railway, ICT and piped water, at least for the towns.

Without good infrastructure, the economy cannot grow and socio – economic transformation cannot take place. Why? This is because the costs of doing business in the economy will remain high and, therefore, profitability for companies will be impossible. In some cases, even costly infrastructure is not available.

There is a good measurement I like to use. This is Kwh per capita. If you look at the internet, you will find that the Kwh per capita for the USA is 14,000 while some of the African countries have as low as 8.

How can Africa grow if we do not solve this problem?

Instead, of addressing the problem of infrastructure, you find that the African elite is demanding for higher wages. Since much of the locally generated revenue goes for wages and corruption, infrastructure development is left for the so called “donors”. The “donors” are not seriously interested in African infrastructure. Since independence in the 1960s, I have not seen a single railway project these donors have supported in the part of Africa near Uganda. Yet everybody knows that the railway is the second cheapest mode of transport after water transport.

A business cannot sustainably produce if somebody does not buy what that business produces. Therefore, the market is the greatest stimulus for production. Yet colonialism had ensured that Africa was balkanized into 54 states, many of them small. The North American continent has got only three countries: the USA, Canada and Mexico. Yet Africa has got 54 states.

It was, therefore, correct that our leaders, after independence, saw this danger and in 1980 launched the Lagos Action Plan to integrate all the African countries into regional blocs: ECOWAS, COMESA, EAC, SADDEC, Central African Market, etc. Eventually, we hope to form the common market of the whole of Africa. This is moving in the right direction.

The mistake of continuing to export raw-materials is a type of modern slavery for Africa. I always use the example of Coffee. When we export one kilogram of coffee beans, we may earn one US dollar. The same kilogram of coffee processed by Nestle in London will bring the British in UK, US $ 15. That is why I always say that Uganda has been aiding the UK with, at least, US $ 10 in every kilogram of coffee. This is apart from the jobs that we export – the jobs for roasting, the jobs for grinding and packing the processed coffee. What is true of coffee is true of cotton, wood products, minerals, petroleum etc.

The problem of ideological disorientation sometimes leads to the criminalization of the State. Especially the soldiers engage in extra-judicial killings with impunity. This is most dangerous. If the State does not punish the State agents that kill people, rape women, poach animals in the National Parks, the State may, eventually, splinter. The State agents must be wholly accountable, especially for murder. Without doing this, the Government and the State lose legitimacy even if they are elected initially. In Uganda, since 1986, the Courts i.e. General Court Martial, Divisions’ Courts Martial and Field Courts Martial, have condemned to death 147 soldiers for killing people extra-judicially and 23 of them have been carried out (executed). That is how Uganda has been stabilized.

When we succeed in eliminating the 10 strategic bottlenecks, many of the African countries will be in good shape. That, however, will leave one strategic challenge – that of strategic security. You saw from the beginning of this speech that we were able to regain our independence partly because of the support of the socialist Bloc – The Soviet Union, China etc. As you can see these are very powerful countries – big land area, big populations and technologically capable. However, they cannot always be there for us. As they develop, their priorities change.

During the anti-colonial struggle, they acted as our strategic rear. Who is our strategic rear now? We should have used the freedom of Independence to create that strategic base of our own through political integration. That is why in East Africa we are always working for the Political federation of East Africa. Some of the countries in the World are publically saying that they want to achieve superiority on land, in the air, at sea and in space – the so called four dimensional superiority. Where does that leave us?

That is why we must create our own Centres of gravity.
The Federation of East Africa has been the aim of the patriots in that part of Africa led by the late Mzee Jomo Kenyatta and Mwalimu Julius Nyerere. It would be one such centre of gravity.

I cannot end this speech without mentioning the need for one African language. As I told you, there are four linguistic groups in Africa. These groups are also linked. Fortunately, our people on the East African Coast have distilled a non-tribal language known as Swahili. This language is not as rich in vocabulary as some of the interior dialects. That is why they over borrow from Arabic.

However, its non-tribal structure can be used very effectively if it is impregnated with many of the words from all parts of Africa. We would, then, have one of the richest languages on earth. Up to now, the Swahili language does not have, for instance, one word for national anthem. They use two words. “wimbo wa taifa”.
In our Luo dialects in Uganda, however, we have the word, Lubaala – meaning anthem. It can be incorporated in Swahili.

The potential for Africa is huge. The opportunities are plenty. The future is ours if we sort out what needs to be done.

Africa should not continue to tempt the greedy by being weak. Unsurprisingly, here on earth wolves still eat lambs.

I thank you.


By Rengo Gyyw Rengo, Jr., Addis Ababa

Rumours of Coup in South Sudan began ways back to the pre-referendum period before the country could gain her independence on July 9th, 2011. At least, over ten coup attempts have been rumoured since then. The “coup plotters” frequently named were the former Vice President Dr. Riek Machar; General Oyai Deng Ajak, former SPLA Chief of Staff and security Minister; Hon. Nhial Deng Nhial, former Minister of Foreign Affairs and son of William Deng Nhial, a martyred eminent South Sudanese politician; Dr. Majak D’Agoot who was then the Director of National Security and Deputy Defense Minister; Mac Paul, Deputy Director of Military Intelligence and General Isaac Mamur Mate who is now the Minister in charge of National Security-All members of the ruling party, the SPLM and its military wing, the SPLA.

The latest “coup attempt” involved eleven prominent names including Rebecca Nyandeng, the wife of the nation’s Founding Father, Dr. John Garang de Mabior.

Prejudgingly, majority of these coup attempts, at least, are regarded as farce and without substances. The entire world including the informed South Sudanese citizens except the sophists’ government have rejected the labelling of the crises within the SPLM as a coup. But I will not begin from there. There is a need to tiptoe back a little bit into recent history of coups in South Sudan.

It all became clear when in around 2007; there appeared in a system’s lexicon an infamous group called “Garang Boys or Garang’s Orphans”.  Garang orphans implied that the new regime of Kiir raised its own children other than those who had worked under Dr. John Garang de Mabior, the founder and unrivalled visionary leader of the SPLM/A since 1983. Garang perished in an obscured plane crash in July 2005 after signing the CPA and inducting the Movement into Sudanese post war politics.

When his deputy Salva Kiir took over, the new system developed new cadres who had been either opposed to Garang or new comers to the parameters of liberation. In his book, “From Bush to Bush: Journey to Liberty in South Sudan [2011], Steven Wondu, noted that, “I soon discovered that the death of John Garang had created orphans beyond his natural household. The center of power had shifted past Salva Kiir to elements not well known for their loyalty to the fallen leader and the central agenda of the SPLM-SPLA. The ‘Garang Boys’ as his closest aides were mockingly renamed, had been sidelined.”

This conspicuously created “we and they” polarity.  The entrenched inner group pointed their fingers at the politically ostracised outside group, which due to the physical absence of John Garang, became known as “the Garang’s orphans”. And maybe, these were people the incumbent system thought were closed [closest aides as argued by Wondu above] to John Garang when he was at the political helm as was evidenced in the Yei-Rumbek Crisis.

During the crises meeting in Rumbek between November 29 and December 1, 2014, particularly during the second deliberations, Commander Kiir said the following:

“I must warn the Chairman that Nimeiri was made to be unpopular by his security organs. Those who are misleading you and giving you false security information about others will suffer with you together or leave with you. … Mr. Chairman, you have talked about people eating the boat while we are in the middle of the river. Let me add this; the issue is not eating the boat in the middle of the river. The issue is that there are a few who have already crossed to the other side of the river and when the remaining ones asked them to bring the boat, they refused to return the boat. This is the problem.”

Through their press release on December 6, 2013, Dr. Riek Machar and his detained colleagues, some of whom are now released, unmasked and confirmed the magnitude of the polarity as follows:

The anti-Garang elements inside and outside the SPLM encircled comrade Salva Kiir Mayardit’s leadership of the SPLM and the Government of Southern Sudan [2005-2007]. These elements using their relationship with General Salva Kiir targeted and ostracized certain SPLM leaders and cadres they nicknamed ‘Garang orphans/boys’ creating schisms and precipitating open quarrels within the SPLM ranks.

Stephen Wondu, the former SPLM/A Movement Spokesman in 1990s, further backs up and notes that,

“We adopted a common name at the orphanage—places we used to congregate in Juba. Everyone was called Abau Jadau Nesitu (Rejected Discarded Forgotten). It was not all ‘idle garrulous talk’ at the orphanage. We had to device a strategy of how to return to the center. The guiding principle in our discourse was to ensure the survival of our most cherished achievement; the peace agreement and our gradual recovery of power to ensure its implementation. We could not trust some of the characters who had taken advantage of John Garang’s death and seized the front row in the chamber of leadership. They did not know the fine print and the silent provisions of the peace agreement. John Garang had said that during the interim period, the people who created the agreement must take full responsibility for its implementation. They were the ones who knew where the obstacles were and how to circumvent them. He [John Garang] gave the illustration of a man sleeping in a dark room. If he is the owner of the room, he can find his way to the door without stumbling on the furniture and breaking the glasses. A stranger would not be able to find a safe way to the door. On the basis of this logic it was our duty to pull the strangers out of that room before dark.”

Apparently, any complains that must have been raised by those associated with John Garang in regard to the direction of the country’s affairs were taking, including the CPA implementation, was and still is regarded as an attempt by this group to make a coup. Garang’s Boys versus Kiir’s cabal, cronies and sycophants created irreconcilable gaps within the SPLM as a party.

The first scenario occurred between 2006 and 2007 when Gen. Oyai Deng Ajak, a reputed SPLA war commander and Co. were allegedly accused of wanting to topple the government of Salva Kiir. It was alleged that the group wanted to install Rebecca Nyandeng de Mabior, the widow of John Garang who was then a maiden Road Minister in the post CPA Government of Southern Sudan (installed Nyandeng into power). On his Facebook dated 30th January 2014, my distinguished friend and renowned writer Paanluel Wel recounted the scenario as follows:

During the transitional period, Comrade Oyai Deng Ajak was accused of planning a military coup to put Madam Nyandeng Garang into power; after independence, he is being charged with participating in a coup to put Dr. Riek Machar in powersame person making the (same) accusationsYet, it is him, Oyai Deng Ajak, more than anybody else, that the SPLM/A honored with leading its most prized military campaign of its revolutionary war–Operation Jungle Storm of the Bright Star Campaignthe campaign to wrestle Juba from KhartoumSomebody somewhere is either jealous of his chequered records or damn afraid of him or bothWhat is Nyandeng and Riek to Oyai that he would risk his life to put them into power?

In a confidential document dated March 27, 2007 entitled Subject: Sudan: SPLA Chief Of Staff Says He Might Be Replaced; General Oyai made an account of an alleged coup which involved him and also hinted at the general problems of maladministration. That document was republished on September 5, 2011 by Paanluel Wȅl under the title Wikileak on Gen. Oyai Deng Disagreement with Salva Kiir. The anonymous author of the wikileak document reported the little known but widely suspected perfidiosity as follows:

Various figures, including two of his four deputy chiefs of staff, have repeated rumors to the president that Deng is plotting a coup, Deng said. He dismissed the rumors as nonsense. The two deputies, Mamur and Mathok, are corrupt and unreliable, Deng stressed. One rumor has it that Deng wants to seize power and hand it to GOSS roads minister Rebecca Garang, wife [of the] Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) leader John Garang, who died in July 2005. “I told the president, why would I do that?” Deng said. “Why would anyone take power just to give to someone else?”

This SPLA general whose name had positively become a household name during the war, Oyai Deng Ajak, brought forth some important observations. He argued that the president is a victim of apathy, lethargy and indolence which plagues the management of the SPLA. As a result, Deng conceded that the military top leadership has always been afflicted by internal suspicion and mistrusts, transmuting to accusations and counter accusations as revealed above.  “We have disagreed on many things. There have even been times when I have had to do things, he did not want, which is not good for a military–but it was necessary,” observed General Deng.

General Deng denied he had any intention of wanting to make a coup and exculpated himself from any wrongdoing. Whether being stalked politically, Oyai Deng is now among the eleven SPLM senior politicians accused of attempting a coup again in Juba during December 2013 turmoil. The regime alleged that Oyai, on Dec 15th, 2014 was heard on phone (phone tapped or hacked] talking to Taban Deng about the coup. Whatever the duo said is not yet known. The regime prosecutors are yet to present the recorded messages before the judges.  It would be wise for the readers to watch out for that.

In March 2007, on the heel of the above scenario involving Oyai, General Mamur Mate was arrested in his home by the leadership and imprisoned without trial. He was allegedly accused of planning a coup against the government and President Kiir in particular. Mamur was particularly accused of acquisition of military hard wares from abroad without the knowledge of the system and stashing them in his home. Among the items he was allegedly accused of were military uniforms including bullet proof vests, sniper weapons, and unsubstantiated collaboration with “Garang boys” and Dr. Riek Machar, the usual suspected masterminder of all South Sudanese apocalyptic events. “Mamur was responsible for other transgressions, including the dispatch of a platoon of 47 soldiers to Uganda for unauthorized training,” wikileak quoted Deng.  General Mamur, this fearless SPLA General was kept in prison for twenty-one months from March 2007 to January 1, 2009. However, Oyai argued that Mamur’s arrest was an “administrative” issue based on an unacceptable financial conduct other than political matter. He was later pardoned, released and reinstated in to the SPLA.

In 2008, prior to the commencement of the SPLM 2nd National Convention held in Juba, the system had a plan of removing one of the SPLM Party’s three deputies, Dr. Riek Machar. The SPLM has been having three deputy chairmen, Dr. Riek Machar, James Wani Igga and Malik Agar. The Convention top echelonic organizers through revision of the party laws had planned to reduce the three deputies to one in order to get rid of one and sacrifice the other. Riek and his group knew he was the target of the removal conspiracy.

The convention was delayed for two days because of commotions between the groups. Riek withdrew to his home and held meetings there. Kiir and his supporters went and held meetings in White Nile Inn behind Juba Stadium, which the author attended. With clear signs of looming problems, Kiir had to announce that the convention would begin the following day despite the ominous situation.  That was after saying, “even if one manages to kill someone, still that person will run away from the same dead body in fear!” referring to an unspecified addressee.  The night prior to the convention was tense in Juba. However, the sun managed to arrive early, and the convention kicked off.  Within two days, the situation was threatening again.  It took the nearly two thousand delegates to compel the Convention to maintain the three deputies for the sake of peace and unity towards the referendum. The top leadership had to withdraw to Home and Away Hotel to discuss the position of the delegates. It finally identified with the position of the delegates. That was when the convention resumed and went on smoothly.

In 2011, another coup was rumoured in Juba with Dr. Majak D’Agoot, and Nhial Deng Nhial, twice a Minister of Foreign Affairs, being rumoured too as being behind another coup attempt. We would have known nothing had Salva Mathok Gengdit not published a crucial piece of letter in Juba Post Newspaper in response to the coup. Mathok Gengdit then refuted the existence of a coup and accused Paul Malong Awan of Aweil of orchestrating a false coup in order to sow acrimony within the nation and perhaps to tarnish the image of the two prominent personalities Dr. Majak D’Agoot and Nhial Deng Nhial.

There had been speculation always as to who are the potential “threats” to Kiir’s Administration. I would like to paraphrase this statement. Dr. Majak D’Agoot rose under Kiir during the long war and some people; say inner cabals to be precise, thought or still think he was being groomed by Salva Kiir for future leadership of the country. Commander Majak Agoot had had rapid promotions through the ranks during the bush war, something the SPLM/A and South Sudanese attribute to his association Salva Kiir as his Aide-de-camp, bodyguard or adjutant for most of the war times. It is alleged that in that capacity, Commander Salva Kiir would invariably recommend and submit Majak’s name to John Garang the SPLA C-in-C for promotion to the next SPLA rank every time there would be promotion. Thus, according to Paanluel Wel, “his [Majak] rise in the SPLM/A‘s military hierarchy was owed to his closeness to Commander Salva Kiir.”

However, Majak’s promotions and rise through the ranks above his SPLA’s Unit, colleagues and shell is said to have alarmed John Garang, the SPLA C-in-C. Dr. John Garang ‘was once reported having asked Commander Salva Kiir “Ye menh ye ruook dhede ye tenou koor bin ye laar ne wo-nhiim?” which translate: “This youngster that you are promoting so fast, where do you want to take him above us?”’ elucidated Paanluel.

Majak, a shrewd young revolutionary lad to have joined the Movement in the 1980s is among the first SPLA generals to earn PhD in economics. Being an immediate nephew to the late Akuot Atem de Mayen did not make him to side with his uncle during the Akuot’s-Garang’s leadership wrangle at the inception of the SPLM/A.  He sided with Dr. John Garang against his own uncle, on ideological ground, practicality and feasibility. Unlike most of his contemporaries in the bush, Majak kept close to books in the war trenches.  Wounded as early as Jerkou Battle of 1985, he subsequently led many operations in various frontlines, from Red Army at Demidolo to Bor to Kapoeta to Bhar el Ghazal regions where he was an area commander. After the fall of Kapoeta to the enemy on May 28, 1992, it was Commander Salva Kiir and Commander Majak who defeated SAF at Buna, on their way to capturing Narus and to advance on the Sudan-Kenyan border.

The author is not out to promote Dr. Majak D’Agoot’s image, it is because I do not want to give room for misunderstanding between his promotions and deeds or achievements. This helps explain why he is in prison now. John Garang, though not directly relevant to his early concerns, Majak is still relevant to the status of our country. There are many people from within and from without who are alarmed by his previous association with Salva Kiir and his obvious progress in all fields. This is hunting the General.

Majak, a successful field commander in his own right, and a high ranking SPLA General, a Lieutenant General, was sent to go and “worked” with the notorious Khartoum NISS as a Deputy Director, a position and place that would take a disciplined fighter to be. After the secession of South Sudan from Sudan, Dr. Majak D’Agoot was brought back to Juba to head the national security portfolio as its first Director. It was under Majak that the South Sudan National Intelligence and Security Services [SSNISS] building at Jebel Market in Juba, was constructed; something which most departments including the SPLM as the ruling party have not done. Most institutions in South Sudan still do not have permanent buildings.

These raised stakes for being potential “successor” of Kiir. He risked being framed up through coups to either cause friction between him and Salva Kiir, his long time boss or worse to be thrown into prison under treason where he would lurk behind bars inactive and have his image tarnished for good. Salva Mathok brought out the intention of Malong Awan in his exposition of the situation and the thesis out rightly and literarily exonerated Majak and Nhial of any wrongdoing. He opined that Majak and Nhial had nothing to do with the alleged coup and placed the whole onus of responsibility on Malong Awan. In “Actualizing the Signs of a failed State: Another Somalia (Part I)” published on February 26, 2014, Kuir ȅ Garang, a South Sudanese Poet, Author and Cousin based in Canada made the following observations.

People like Northern Bahr El Ghazal governor, Malong Awan, who is Kiir’s very close ally, hates Dr. Majak D’Agoot with passion.  Malong and Bol Madut made a lot of noise to late Dr. John Garang de Mabior in the late 1990s to have Majak removed from Bahr el Ghazal as the area commander. With influence on Kiir now, it’s no brainer Majak is now being set up for death or political vilification.

Majak as a Director of National Security and Intelligence was assigned to go and talk to a rebel leader, George Athor Deng, at the rebels’ Headquarters somewhere in Khor Fulus [Pigi]. The late George Athor had rebelled against the government following the 2010 elections. Majak was dispatched together with the Episcopal Church Archbishop Daniel Deng Bul and few others to go and persuade the rebel leader to abandon rebellion, which many in the system had myopically seen as a rebellion against the Jonglei’s Government. This mission was characterized with conspiracy theories had it not been the Long Hands of Providence God. Many people believed the mission was a death set up for Majak.

Nhial Deng Nhial, equally a versatile personality, being the son of William Deng Nhial, founding member and President of SANU, a highly respected South Sudanese politician martyred in 1968, has been looked at as another Dinka politician with high chances to ascend the top political position in the country. John Garang was accused of wanting to replace Salva Kiir with Nhial Deng in 2004, an allegation the late Garang shrewdly denied. Shrewdly, because Garang in his self-defense declared that, replacing Kiir with Nhial would tantamount to retiring all the SPLA commanders senior in rank to Nhial Deng, something that was unimaginable and unattainable.  The SPLA Commanders who were senior to Nhial were many and powerful. In the bush, military hierarchy is almost sacrosanct. It is a military hierarchy’s qualification that brought Kiir to where he is now.

It would never be known whether John Garang had contemplated the idea of wanting to swap Kiir with Nhial and only backed down or it was an enemy’s ploy and gambit. And if he had contemplated the idea, why would he? Had he lost trust in Kiir’s ability to lead the country in scenario of his absence? Nobody knows.

That allegation almost caused schism between Salva Kiir and John Garang, creating what is now known as the “Yei Camp” headed by Salva Kiir and the “Nairobi/Rumbek camp” with the rest of the leadership. Replacing Kiir with Nhial would have caused a second disastrous split within the Movement after the 1991calamity then led by Riek Machar and Co.  Nhial is an epitome of the group infamously called “John Garang’s boys” among others who this paper would not be able to name them all. Some cabal in the system saw Nhial and Majak as potential candidates for the country’s top post of presidency should Salva Kiir leave power under any `circumstances. We are aware the issue of political succession is ever discussed at drinking places. Of course, the two plus Riek make the triad of potential people with capacity to lead the country.

Mathok Gengdit justified how King Paul [Paul Malong] orchestrated the alleged coup citing the negative role King Paul had played in the “Yei camp” in throes of the 2004 crises. It was alleged that Justin Yach Arop, Arthur Akuien Chol and Dominic Dim Deng had told Salva Kiir that Garang should be arrested in Rumbek by soldiers commanded by King Paul. Maybe it was a mere allegation without a grain of truth, no one knows for sure. In Hilde Johnson’s book, “Waging Peace In The Sudan”, Kiir made a reckon of that and confessed that he was under pressure from Justin Yach, Dim Deng, Arthur Akuien and King Paul to take action on Garang.  Fortunately, he refused. Full of sobriety, he is quoted to have said that “he would rather die at the hand of his comrade than effecting a coup in the SPLM/A.”

It was not long before another coup was rumuored. This time it “involved” Mac Paul, Deputy Director of Military Intelligence and those who were still pursuing Majak politically were quick in pushing Majak’s name in the spinning rumuor. Based on the state sponsored lucrativeness and lushness of rebellions in today’s South Sudan, Paanluel was tempted to say, “Dr. Majak D’ Agoot,… accused of planning military coups on as many occasions as the number of times Peter Gadet has rebelled against Juba, should rather have gone with his uncle Akuot Atem Mayen or with Arok Thon Arok… he would have been a hero today.” There are a lot of things I do not know about this coup. I could not also substantiate the truth from the street talk even if they say there is no smoke without fire.

In South Sudan, there could be smoke without fire or total departure from the truth. Mac was rumuored to have run to Uganda yet according to the circumstantial evident, he was attending talks in Addis Ababa with pagan, negotiating with Khartoum. Another group alleged he was imprisoned. Still, Mac Paul was later seen in the field around Panthou leading SPLA Military Intelligence alongside the SPLA against Khartoum forces. I infer there was no coup attempt at all. Otherwise how would one run or be imprisoned without having committed the act in the first place? The fact was that Mac Paul was neither involved in any coup nor imprisoned. So, there was no coup. It went like any other coup rumuored before on the streets of Juba.

In October 2012, a State House route was cordoned off following what was rumuored as another coup attempt. It was alleged that a tiger-uniformed men [well armed] had approached the State House [aka J1] premises within the town and were detected or thwarted. Juba was incensed once more with more coup rumours. Was it true? I do not know. This time round, the leadership directed its finger towards Major General Simon Gatwec Dual.  The coup news came when the President, Minister of Defense John Kong and Chief of Staff James Hoth Mai were on a visit to Uganda, the advisory backyard of our presidency. The Vice President Dr. Riek Machar had gone to attend a United Nations meeting at New York. President Kiir had to cut his visit to Uganda short and returned to Juba. He went and addressed the army in Bilpam where he told the army that whoever would take power by force would not be recognized by the International Community.  The President also hinted that he had left Majak in charge of the army when the news of coup reached him. Gatwec is said to have denied any involvement.

In December 2013, things became dramatic in South Sudan. President Salva Kiir clad in military uniform and his government announced a coup attempt against the government in December 2013 allegedly led by eleven SPLM senior figures. The eleven senior SPLM officials had held a press conference at the SPLM party’s HQrs, calling on the party’s chairman Salva Kiir who was in Paris, France to resolve issues within the SPLM. First to convene meetings of a party Political Bureau, this would set the agenda for the SPLM National Liberation Council meeting, and to prepare for the Third SPLM National Convention.

President Kiir’s aversion towards reforms in the party led to the independent press conference; shoot out within the presidential citadel unit HEADQUARTERS and eventual arrest of the eleven senior figures.  The whole event was immediately dubbed by the government as a coup d’état attempt although all the members of the alleged coup denied it was a coup. That position is backed by the international community and large segments of South Sudanese society.  We will see why a situation that claimed about one thousand lives in Juba alone and nearly ten thousands lives countrywide is seen differently other than a bloody coup d’état even when it was greased by intensive shooting and engaging gun battles on the streets of Juba during December 2013.

We will examine this through three perspectives, that of a government, that of the eleven detainees and that of the international community. We have already known the government position. It agreed it is a power struggle. Riek Machar in support of the eleven senior SPLM members staged a coup to grab power by force. The government quashed the coup and the coup mutated into a rebellion, which attacked and captured towns of Bor, Bentiu and Malakal temporarily from the government. In a televised address, President Kiir hypothesized the event in the following statement, that, “they tried to carry out a coupbut they have failed. All the people who were involved in this will be arrested.” On that account, the detainees are detained based on the charges of committing treason of coup d’état. This is the regime argument.

The SPLM’s dissenting party holds a different view towards the coup allegations. Rebecca Nyandeng, Dr. Adwok Nyaba and Riek Machar as representatives of their group made their arguments as follows. Their arguments will be aligned with analyses from some independent, international and regional analysts.

In her recent interview with London newspaper, entitled Rebecca Garang Talks about South Sudan’s Non-Existence Coup Attempt & Why Salva Kiir Lied [January 27, 2014]. Rebecca Nyandeng gave the following version.

They may have thought that these people did not come to the meeting and so they were maybe planning a coup. So they made a decision that these people would be arrested. Some of them said they would try to make something so they could accuse these people of planning a coup and arrest them. This is what happened:

“This thing happened in his [Kiir’s] headquarters. When they went there, they wanted to disarm a group of Nuer. They went and found that in the president’s headquarters they were many [soldiers belonging to the] Nuer. Their commander then went to the Chief of the General Staff and asked what he could do. He was then told to leave the [Nuer] soldiers until the next morning. But the officer did not listen to his orders and proceeded to try and disarm the Nuer soldiers. This was the time when this thing erupted and war begun in the headquarters of the president. Then at one o’clock at night, that is when the army headquarters started shooting because there were Nuer members there. Because they were watching the speech of the president, they knew there was a problem.”

On December 17, two days after the alleged coup, Dr. Peter Adwok Nyaba, one of the accused who was still-at-large [evasive] published an informative article, titled “From Dr. Adwok: It Was Not A Coup.” In that important piece, Adwok was refuting and perhaps rebuking a position presented by an editor of the online website known as Southsudannation.com. It is not my intention to go into the duo contentious debate. But Adwok noted that “this time the debate within the SPLM was about democracy and how to make it work in our young republic”. It implied their debate had nothing to do with military skirmishes within Juba.

Adwok, who himself is a SPLA war wounded veteran and former minister enumerated the issues that he believed precipitated the fluidious December political crisis.

All that people are clamoring about as failures of the Government of South Sudan are indeed SPLM failures. The SPLM failure to organize itself with functional organs and institutions sensitive to the concerns of the citizens; the failure to evolve a political ideology has resulted in the ethnicization of SPLM power politics; the failure to institutionalize power relations within the SPLM has result in autocracy and one-man dictatorship relying on ethnic lobbies and close business associates who have turned South Sudan and its state institutions into a limited liability enterprise.

Adwok has drawn a negative nexus between the ruling party SPLM and the Government of South Sudan [GOSS] in the following statement. ‘The SPLM dysfunction has reflects itself [in] the dysfunctionality of South Sudan state and this explains why it has remained since July 9th 2011 under Chapter VII of the UN Charter.’ I will write about “the South Sudan and the UN Chapter VII” in another article.

Adwok had something to say about the coup. To determine the reliability of coup tidings, below was Peter Adwok’s version of the December 2013 crises. Since he has agreed above that he and his group were agitating for democratic realization within the SPLM, what was the strategy laid out to achieve that aim against Kiir who has invariably refused to heed the public censure/critic of the system he is leading?

I live in Juba almost ¾ of a kilometer west of the old Army H/Qs, which now houses Tiger Battalion – the presidential guards. It is not true that “the fateful night started at Nyakuron where an unknown gun (man) fired at the SPLM National Liberation Council which was concluding its meeting attended by Kiir himself.”

It is about two kilometres from Nyakuron Cultural Centre to the Army H/Qs if one follows the tarmac through the University of Juba round about. If the unknown gun (man) fired at the SPLM NLC meeting what are the casualties? This is mere fabrication. The centre was awash with Salva Kiir’s guards and it would have been a massacre I can assure you.

The information we got is that President Kiir ordered Major General Marial Channoung to disarm his soldiers. Marial was at the closing session of the NLC. Left the scene immediately and called for a parade of the Tiger Battalion.

He briefed the troops and ordered them to surrender their arms. They obeyed and executed the orders and dispersed. Now in a mischief, the officer i/c [in charge] of the stores opened the stores and rearmed the Dinka soldiers. A Nuer soldier, who happened to be nearby, questioned this. A fistfight ensured between the two attracting the attention [of] both the commander and his deputy to the scene.

They now could not control the situation as more soldiers came in and broke into the stores. The fight ensued and the Nuer soldiers managed to take control of the H/Qs. It was in the morning yesterday (Monday, 16 December) that SPLA reinforcement came in and dislodged the mutineers. This can later be verified and the truth will come out.

Riek Machar, the alleged leader of the coup also refuted the accusation against him and his group, which was jailed on an account of the coup attempt. Quoted by various media outlets such as sudantribune.com website, CNN, BBC etc and particularly by Hussein Mohammed, Riek Machar who had managed to escape an arrest and talking as a rebel leader in the bush had the following to say.  “What took place in Juba was a misunderstanding between presidential guards within their division, it was not a coup attempt,” Machar told the Paris-based Sudan Tribune news website. “I have no connection with or knowledge of any coup attempt,” “What we wanted was to democratically transform the SPLM,” Machar added. “But Salva Kiir wanted to use the alleged coup attempt in order to get rid of us to control the government and the SPLM.”

Drawing from the third parties’ perspective, that is, from international and regional analysts views, I readily came across Magdi el-Gizouli, a researcher at the Rift Valley Institute, cited in Eric Reeves article, The “Coup” Attempt in South Sudan: What we know’ published the same day as Adwok Article, December 17, 2013. El Gizouli, a familiar regional analyst never feigned his doubt over the coup. ‘It doesn’t seem to be a full-fledged coup attempt in the sense that there’s an organized attempt by Machar to seize power. It appears a bit disorganized”

According to Prof. Eric Reeves, presenting popular views, noted that,

Others in Juba also find the nature of the coup puzzling—its apparently ad hoc quality hardly signifying a well-planned action. It may be, as one highly informed observer with numerous contacts in Juba has said, a “coup” that began by accident but took on a predictable political and ethnic character, of a sort that could be expected in the event of a fully developed coup plan.

In my interactions with ordinary citizens, still majority of them do not believe it was a coup. They see it as outbursts of long latent mistrusts within forces, politicians and at social levels. One could not plan a coup and went back to his home. All the eleven politicians were arrested in their own homes. Some people argued it that way.

However, there are some citizens who argued that all coups should not be defined according to the western definitions. “South Sudan has a right to define it in her own way”. They asked, if it is not a coup, why then have these politicians turned to armed rebellions. Adwok is quick to say the crisis is a boomerang, resulting out of Kiir’s policies and governance style.

Despite these highly doubted coup attempts, South Sudan media especially the SSTV presenters, local radios, field reporters and government officials still proudly talk about a failed coup. One question has remained unanswered, why has South Sudan’s government enjoyed calling almost everything a coup?  Of course there is no doubt that the government in Juba has come under intensive public opprobriosity.

There are chilling examples of such opprobriosity.

Mabior Garang de Mabior, in his article Capt. Mabior Garang de Mabior: A call for fundamental change in South Sudan published on December 24, 2012 by the New Sudan website, asked a question that the nation seems to be struggling with hitherto. De Mabior asked, “If we cannot be different from those in Khartoum, why are we in Juba?” If we cannot become different from our former enemies whom we thought were wrong, why can’t we just return home and apologize?”

Donald Kipkorir, an advocate of the High Court in his article Who will save Government of South Sudan from wrong turn?, published on 06/08/2011 by the Kenyan Standard-on-line wrote that

… we hedged all our bets that GoSS will be a new and different child of Africa. With its abundance resources in oil, iron ore, copper, timber and other yet to be exploited minerals, we knew GoSS will have privileged upbringing.  GOSS adopts triple ills of Africa. She has adopted the triple ills of Africa, lock-stock & barrel! In less than a month after independence, GoSS is entrenching negative tribalism, grand corruption and political hubris.  We weep for GoSS. Its innocence taken away so soon.

Richard Dowden, author of the book “Africa: Altered States, Ordinary Miracles” [2014] simply put a blunt conclusion that “South Sudan’s leaders have learnt nothing from 50 years of independence in Africa.”

South Sudan has been ranked fourth after Sudan in the Failed States Index [FSI] 2013.  Representatives of my government are said to be unhappy of this ranking and their argument is based on the “youngness of the Nation” excuses. What has the youngness of the country to do with stealing billions of money? What has it to do with not setting up a prudent and permanent constitution? What has it to do with not holding people who are corrupt accountable? What has it to do with the formation of tribal armies? Liars.

G. Pascal Zachary, a professor of practice in the Cronkite School of Journalism has called for South Sudan to be put under American trusteeship. “It Needs to Be Put Under U.S.-Led Trusteeship”. With such unsuppressed articulation and loquacity, there are concerns by international personalities who advocate for South Sudan to be placed under the UN trusteeship and be governed by the UN until such times when the people of South Sudan shall be ready to govern themselves.  Top among those personalities is Hank Cohen who has declared that, “South Sudan should be placed under UN trusteeship to aid development of viable self-government” in his recent article. Herman J. Cohen is Former United States Assistant Secretary of State for Africa.

UN trusteeship is a practice and policy of 1940s during the decolonization era in which disputed or swinging territories were put under the UN trusteeship to help them towards their independence or self-government.  All the eleven trust territories under the UN were either merged with neighboring states or became independent sovereign nations. In 1994 the last trust territory, the Palau Islands, became independent and joined the UN as the 185th member. This means no independent and sovereign state like South Sudan has ever been put under the UN Trusteeship.

South Sudan would have qualified to be put under the UN trusteeship in 1940s, pending her quest for independence.  Neither the UN nor the OAU later hinted to that call. The result due to lack of capacity among southerners to form a post-colonial nation-state made the South to be annexed to the North in 1946/7 by the British. William Deng Nhial advocated in his letter to the OAU Secretary General, 1963, for South Sudan to be put under the UN trusteeship following the Arab’s oppression and killings in Southern Sudan.  The UN never sought trusteeship of South Sudan.

It might be true as articulated by Richard Dowden that, “South Sudan’s leaders have learnt nothing from [the experience of the last] 50 years.” It is disgusting that our leaders have manifested in this 21st century the same lack of capacity to govern themselves problem so as to warrant the world to now advocate for South Sudan to be put under foreign powers,  be it the US or UN. Of course, there is no difference between the US-led trusteeship and UN trusteeship.

John Garang had warned about the creation of “Mesh-Kilat-El-Junub [internal South problems] in one of his speeches. He said parochialism, tribalism, self-aggrandizement, clannish-centric policies and negligence of people needs could bring doom upon the country. It is full of author’s emphases.

It is unfortunate that the UN trusteeship of the South Sudan has already started with deployment of the UN army. The UN did not seek consent of South Sudan authorities when it sat in December 2013 to approve and deploy six more thousand troops. African nations are also being used to mobilize more troops under the same placard to be deployed in South Sudan. And Kiir admitted that when he said the UN seeks to co-govern South Sudan with him. The manner and nature of the UN weapons impounded in South Sudan, sent without the government’s knowledge and consent is a clear evident that the UN trusteeship of South Sudan has begun.

Do we blame the UN or the world? No. Kiir and his leadership have provided the unmistakable conduit for the world’s action. He has failed. Who? Kiir! The political hemorrhage and entropy in South Sudan is purely a matter of political and administrative incompetence, even lack of analytical capacity. President Kiir under “constitutional” perjury neglected building the national army, the SPLA and embarked on building a private army, which is mono-clannish. And he had a gut of admitting it. The main army, SPLA remains as clusters of ethnic enclaves and militias with divided loyalties and various commanding centres.

The author had raised almost similar concerns in an article, “managing a liberated society: do you think your new nation is going to hold?” published by the Newsudanvision.com website on by the June 9, 2012 and allAfricaonline.com. South Sudan has been manufacturing its own Frankenstein.  The road we have taken leaves a lot to be desired.

In Dr. John Garang’s view, leadership’s dysfunctionality and impracticality leads to one outcome-divided society. In one of his addresses to the SPLA officers, he prophesized the unfortunate events of today in the following paragraph.

“This is simple arithmetic: if the SPLM cannot deliver anything and we just shout REVOLUTION, REVOLUTION; the cattle of the people are not vaccinated; their children are not vaccinated or sent to school; there is nothing to eat, there are no roads, there are no basic necessities of life—there is no cloth, no needle, not even a razor blade—when the barest minimum of essential things of life are not available, then the people will drive us into the sea, even though there is no sea here they will find one.”

Let me conclude by stating that time for uncultured sophistry is gone. We are watching. We are recording and a day of reckoning where everyone failing our dear state shall be made accountable is certainly drawing near. The Ashanti people say, “One falsehood spoils a thousand truths.” There are so many coup attempts to be true. The thousand truths are that, South Sudan has no law; no organize political parties, no visionary and practical leadership, no judicial systems, no national army and no services delivery. The no…no…no series goes on. The only active sectors in South Sudan are tribonationalism, corruption and power struggle. Then, is it a consummated state?

Salva Kiir does not represent Patrice Lumumba. However, South Sudan as a country is going the D.R Congo way. It is a struggle between Moise Tshome, Joseph Desire Mobutu and the unfortunate Patrice Lumumba. If we do not take care, the nation will be left in an adinfintum failure.

The Juba’s regime is witch-hunting its concern citizens. Without a coup, a kangaroo court is set up to silence its four critical citizens. This is a judicial mockery, absurdity and manipulation. The trial of the four citizens does not and cannot address the objective realities of the day and the fundamental problem in our country.  The state is standing on nothing but four crooked legs to use the phrase of Dr. Jok Madut Jok.  Isn’t our government an impractical phantasm? How else will I conclude this message, either the world, the majority is wrong, and the impractical cliquish government is right or vice versa.

The government that has veered off is basically making the nation and its masses expendable.  Unfortunately, the reality is disproving Plato’s view, that a philosopher-king is better than public opinion. In our case, it is the public opinion, which is competent than the will and desire of the South Sudanese philosopher-king [s] running the government. Isn’t majority a law? Neither Kujur nor God Almighty will revoke the verdict the masses has put on the government. What is a government that does not heed to the cries of the masses?

All the country’s dialogue should begin with the Constitutional and law reforms, in order to establish a viable and responsible nation in South Sudan.

The system is ideologically Kiir without Garang.

About the Author: Rengo Gyyw Rengo, Jr., is a former member of the SPLA Red Army.  He is the author of the upcoming Red Army’s memoirs, entitled, “The Journey of No Return: Unaccompanied Minors, Red Army, Lost boys of Southern Sudan caught between the cause and the refuge”. He can be reached at: rgrengo@yahoo.com


© UNMISS, Security Council

SC/11323
7141st Meeting (PM)

He Tells of Protests against United Nations As Members Hear from UN-Women Head, South Sudan Permanent Representative

Amid extreme violence and a national political crisis now entering its fourth month, the raison d’être of the United Nations Mission in the Republic of South Sudan (UNMISS) no longer applied, the head of peacekeeping operations told the Security Council today, saying it would suspend its current activities and re-focus on five priority areas.

Under-Secretary-General Hervé Ladsous said in his briefing this afternoon that the Mission’s new focus would be protecting civilians, facilitating humanitarian assistance, monitoring and reporting on human rights, preventing further inter-communal violence and supporting the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) [mediation] process as and when requested, and within available capabilities.

He said the Mission would concentrate on protecting the internally displaced people sheltering within United Nations compounds and other locations, and that would expand once conditions were created for their safe return home. The new posture of UNMISS would be in place until the two sides to the conflict finalized a political agreement.

“The situation is grave,” he said, pointing out that World Food Programme (WFP) operations were almost at a standstill. As such, the Secretary-General requested the Council to augment the military and police components of UNMISS for one year beyond the inter-mission cooperation framework. The ceiling would be raised from 7,000 to 12,500 soldiers, and to four mobile police units.

Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Executive Director of the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN-Women), recounted her visit to Juba, South Sudan’s capital, a month ago, saying she had met with displaced women living in appalling conditions that were a source of health and security risks. The international response had been vastly insufficient, and to improve the situation, UN-Women would provide safe spaces and psychosocial support within Juba’s UNMISS protection sites.

She said UN-Women had also offered a gender adviser to the IGAD mediation team, and was ready to support any effort to bolster the numbers of women involved in monitoring and verification efforts. The Security Council’s commitment to women’s participation, outlined in its resolution 2122 (2013), was now being tested in South Sudan. “We can demonstrate to the women of South Sudan, who continue on in the most desperate of circumstances, that our courage and determination will match theirs,” she declared.

Francis Deng ( South Sudan), offering the national perspective, said his Government did not take the anti-UNMISS protests across the country lightly, emphasizing: “This is not the policy of the Government of South Sudan.” At the same time, he encouraged delegates to appreciate the anger of those behind the demonstrations, especially when certain actions gave the impression — however mistaken — that those representing the United Nations might be supportive of “the other side of the conflict”. While the Mission’s mandate would understandably focus on civilian protection, human rights and security sector reform, it should continue with other elements that were crucial to stabilizing the country, he said, stressing that the Government would work to end the violence as soon as possible and return the three-year-old nation to the path of sustainable peace, development and prosperity.

The meeting began at 3:07 p.m. and ended at 3:50 p.m.

Background

Meeting this afternoon to hear updates on the situation in South Sudan, members of the Security Council had before them the report of the Secretary-General on South Sudan (document S/2014/158). Expected to brief them were the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations and the Executive Director of the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN-Women).

Briefings

HERVÉ LADSOUS, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, said extreme violence in South Sudan had displaced some 800,000 people. The crisis was now a national political crisis, the conflict having expanded throughout the country, he said, emphasizing that not a single region had been spared. Mediation by the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) had resulted in a 23 January agreement to cease hostilities, and another on detainees, signed by the Government of South Sudan and its opponents within the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) supporting former Vice-President Riek Machar.

He said that, during the second round of negotiations, the parties had agreed to resolve the political conflict rooted in internal party dynamics. They would hold a meeting among eight members of the SPLM Politburo — four of whom were allies and four opponents of President Salva Kiir — who would seek a solution to the crisis within the party. The talks would be led jointly by the Ethiopian People’s Democratic Revolutionary Front and the African National Congress of South Africa. A key demand of the opposition was the release of all 11 political detainees, he said, noting that seven had been released on 29 January, while trial proceedings against the remaining four had begun on 11 March.

More broadly, the security and humanitarian situation would continue to deteriorate, he said, until the sides engaged fully in political talks, respected the cessation of hostilities and allowed freedom of movement for the United Nations and its partners. Both sides persisted in prioritizing the pursuit of military gains over negotiations on a political settlement, and the longer it continued, the greater the chances for further regional intervention would grow. In that regard, the immediate establishment of a monitoring and verification mechanism was essential, he said, noting that a joint technical committee had been formed with its headquarters in Juba, South Sudan’s capital. Monitoring and verification teams were being trained for deployment to six sites in conflict areas, while IGAD had decided to deploy a robust force by mid-April to provide security for the monitors.

Under such conditions, the raison d’être of the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) no longer applied, he said, highlighting the need for a strategic shift in the Mission’s posture. UNMISS would suspend activities dedicated to extending State authority and focus on five priorities: protecting civilians; facilitating humanitarian assistance; monitoring and reporting on human rights; preventing further inter-communal violence; and supporting the IGAD process as and when requested, and within available capabilities. The protection priority would be for displaced people sheltering in United Nations compounds and other locations, and would expand once conditions were created for their safe return home, he said, adding that the new posture of UNMISS would be in place until the two sides to the conflict finalized a political agreement.

He then described a systematic and organized negative campaign against UNMISS, saying that some local and national officials had vilified the United Nations. Under such conditions, the Organization would need to consider drawing down staff and limiting its activities to the “absolute minimum” relating to protection, human rights monitoring and providing support for humanitarian assistance. “The situation is grave,” he said, pointing out that World Food Programme (WFP) operations had been brought almost to a standstill. As such, the Secretary-General requested the Council to augment the military and police components of UNMISS for one year, beyond the inter-mission cooperation framework, he said. The ceiling would be raised from 7,000 to 12,500 soldiers, and to four mobile police units.

The deployment of additional military troops would occur in three phases, the second of which would be completed at the end of June with 2,800 soldiers and three police units on the ground, he said. The third phase would include the deployment of the two final infantry battalions. The South Sudanese people have suffered too much and for too long, he said, underlining the duty of political leaders to end the violence immediately. They should order their forces to cease military operations, participate meaningfully in the talks taking place in Addis Ababa and work to build a State that would exercise its functions through democratic institutions and transparent processes.

PHUMZILE MLAMBO-NGCUKA, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN-Women, said the violence in South Sudan had caused a serious humanitarian crisis with a disproportionate impact on women and girls. She said that, visiting Juba a month ago, she had met with President Kiir, Cabinet Ministers, donors, United Nations agencies, the Speaker of Parliament, Members of the National Legislative Assembly and displaced women living within UNMISS protection sites, in appalling conditions that were sources of health and security risks to women and girls.

Data from one site indicated that 58 per cent of households were headed by females, she said. Some women did not know where their children were, while the husbands of others had gone missing or had been killed. Many had themselves experienced violence and all were struggling to survive, she said, pointing out that South Sudanese women experienced the world’s highest levels of maternal mortality, and that more than 8 in 10 were illiterate. “This is a matter of extreme emergency, of life and death,” she stressed.

Describing the international response as vastly insufficient, she said only 24 per cent had been funded, adding that during her visit, she had committed to initiating UN-Women humanitarian efforts in Juba’s UNMISS civilian protection sites, which would provide safe spaces, psychosocial support, ways to generate income and skills training. The women in the protection sites demanded inclusion, and their desire for peace was overwhelming. They had built inclusive coalitions and were demanding a voice in the decisions being made to resolve the national crisis.

Noting that UN-Women had offered a gender adviser to the IGAD mediation team, she said it was also ready to offer any support necessary to IGAD efforts to bolster the numbers of women in monitoring and verification efforts, to link to civil society efforts, and to provide expertise on the monitoring of sexual violence. The Council’s commitment to women’s participation, outlined in resolution 2122 (2013), were now being tested in South Sudan, she said. “We can demonstrate to the women of South Sudan, who continue on in the most desperate of circumstances, that our courage and determination will match theirs.”

FRANCIS DENG (South Sudan) said it was undeniable that had UNMISS not opened its camps, thousands more people would have lost their lives. The country had much to lose by alienating the United Nations, he said, expressing appreciation also to non-governmental groups for having helped to save lives. The Government was doing its best to prove to its people — and to the international community — that it hoped for a speedy end to the conflict, and the President was strongly committed to peace, unity and national reconciliation.

As such, the Government would work to end the violence as soon as possible, he said, adding that it would then conduct in-depth discussions to determine how mistakes could be corrected and how to take the nation back to the path of sustainable peace, development and prosperity. South Sudan did not take the anti-UNMISS protests taking place across the country lightly, and wished to assure the Council that “this is not the policy of the Government of South Sudan”, which would exert all efforts to contain hostile publicity.

At the same time, he encouraged the international community to appreciate the anger of those behind the demonstrations, especially when certain actions gave the impression — however mistaken — that those representing the United Nations might be supportive of “the other side of the conflict”. Such misunderstandings could generate hostility. While it was understandable that the Council would look to focus the Mission’s mandate on civilian protection, human rights and security-sector reform, it should also continue with other elements that were crucial to stabilizing the country.

The Jonglei State Two Acting Governors

Posted: March 19, 2014 by PaanLuel Wël Media Ltd. in Featured Articles, Malith Alier

By Malith Alier, Juba

Jonglei is the largest state in South Sudan measuring about 200,000 square kilometres. It borders Upper Nile, Lakes, Central Equatoria and Eastern Equatoria States. It is an easterly State bordering Ethiopia and Kenya. Like her sisterly states in former Upper Nile Province, Jonglei has vast oil reserves lying unexploited underground. These reserves were discovered in late seventies and early eighties by American Exxon Mobile and French company, Total. However, despite natural resource blessing, Jonglei state is only known for endemic conflict spanning decades on end.

Administratively, Jonglei State is divided in to eleven Counties namely; Duk, Uror, Nyirol, Akobo, Pibor, Bor, Twic East, Pochala, Fangak, Pigi and Ayod. The lower administrative divisions are Payams, Bomas and lastly villages.

The demographics of Jonglei is Nuer, Dinka, Anyuak, Murle, Kachip or Suri and lastly Jie. These grouping have fought themselves over cattle for centuries to satisfy their traditional needs like marriage and sustenance. The re-emergence of new conflict tends to further this age old enmity which is passed down to young generations.

The current rebellion has extended the suffering of the people of Jonglei in particular and greater Upper Nile in general. There was a glimpse of hope that the year 2014 was going to be different from other years since interim period. Nobody was aware that Riek Machar will be on the spotlight once again in spearheading internecine conflict over power. Bor, the capital of Jonglei since last December changed hand four times between the SPLA and rebels. The population of Bor is scattered to lakes, Central Equatoria and Eastern Equatoria besides neighbouring countries in this region. The Government of South Sudan is doing what it can but there is a funny twist in this endeavour. The acting Governor of the Jonglei State is stuck in Juba for reasons known to him.

The president of the Republic, Salva Mayardit issued an order for Governors of the three most affected States to return to their respective States to reactivate their duties in order to alleviate the suffering of Jonglei, Unity and Upper Nile. One Governor who did heed that called is John Koang Nyuon, the Governor of Jonglei. He is currently in the coordination office in Juba, doing nothing for the welfare of the State. Mr. John Koang was appointed late last year replacing Kuol Manyang as an acting Governor pending election in 60 days according to the country’s constitution. There are other two acting Governors in Lakes and Unity States whose tenures violate the country’s constitution. Two of these governors returned to his state after the presidential order and are now active on the ground in his state.

The Bor, Twic East and Duk County MPs several times have unsuccessfully requested the acting Governor to return to Bor to encourage the displaced people to return to Jonglei. The MPs are telling the acting Governor the obvious. They are the second voice after the president. His work station is Bor but not Juba! The president, the MPs and the people of Jonglei would like to see the acting Governor return because of the following reasons; his work station is Bor, to combat insecurity, to delivery basic services, to encourage displace people to return and finally to organise the State affairs which are devastated by war.

Mr. John Koang should know that he is illegally occupying the seat of Jonglei State Governor. He further, violates the South Sudan and Jonglei State constitutions by allowing another acting Governor in Bor while he stays in Juba. There are clauses in both constitutions which allow two governors at one time. In case he is not confidence in the state, he should resign with immediate effect to allow the President to appoint another acting Governor because that is what the war imposes on the three States of former Upper Nile.

John Koang is the current president appointed acting Governor for Jonglei. He is currently in exile in Juba while a Minister of Finance, Aquila Mam is the one on the ground in Bor carrying out duties on behalf of Nyuon. This is a constitutional crisis added to the current crisis prevalent in the nation.

The president of the country should urgently intervene to correct this anomaly in the State of Jonglei. If John Koang fears for anything in Bor he should make it clear to the people of Jonglei and the President of the Republic. The acting Governor should know that being a Governor comes with obligations and privileges. He is now enjoying privileges while churning obligations.

The five or six peaceful Counties in the State demand a committed Governor on the ground but not the one who cowardly procrastinate in Juba which is for Central Equatoria State and Central Government.

State Coordination offices are headed by State Coordinators but not Governors like Nyuon. Every citizen of Jonglei should think of this issue seriously.

Displaced people of Jonglei are languishing in Mingkaman, Guolyar because no one encourages them to return to Bor. The State Relief and Rehabilitation Commission try to persuade them but to no avail. If the top man, the Governor has no confidence in security of the State then who should spearhead the return to the State?

The Bor County Commissioner is the real man of the people. He stayed put with his people in Guolyar and was the first man to go to Bor when it was recaptured by SPLA forces on 18 January 2014. The few people who returned to Bor were encouraged by his presence there. The acting Governor should take hint from this man who has the interest of his people at heart.

I urge the people of Jonglei to call for relieve of John Koang for refusing to heed calls to return to Bor. The MPs should change their views and join the rest of us to call for his replacement with immediately. He should be replaced by somebody from the peaceful Counties in the State. The two acting Governors will cause more confusion than solving problems of the State.

David Yau Yau is fighting for division of Jonglei State since 2010. Since Jonglei is the largest State South Sudan, the rest of other Counties should join him for division of Jonglei to three States that will be peaceful with themselves. It should run like this; Bor, Twic East, Duk and Pigi should form one state. The Nuer Counties form the other and the last one Pibor and Pochalla. This way, the problems of Jonglei would be over. Cattle rustling, child abduction, war, destruction and pillage will things of the past.

In conclusion, the acting Governor should either go to his work station in Bor or step aside to allow the President to appoint a new acting Governor. The displaced people should be encouraged to return to Jonglei to join in food production because the rains are at hand. Jonglei State should be given a lease of new life with a committed Governor who attends to important issues on the ground.