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South Sudan at crossroads ahead of the 2024 general elections

Umba Peter Bosco

Umba Peter Bosco

By Umba Peter Bosco, Juba, South Sudan

Saturday, 19 August 2023 (PW) — Internalization of peace and security in the era of globalization is becoming increasingly important, although ambiguous. This phenomenon is exacerbated by the devastating Western hegemony, which often impacts local efforts to achieve community peace and security.

The politicization of humanitarian and developmental interventions also creates a vague relationship between recipient nations and the West, especially the international community. This nature of the relationship deprives recipient countries of their autonomy and right to make decisions about their own future independently.

For eighteen years since 2005, South Sudan has depended on financial and technical support from its friends, especially the TROIKA countries, that is, Norway, the United States, and the United Kingdom. Yet the local population in South Sudan is less knowledgeable and has a limited understanding of this relationship.

Rather than this relationship being well understood by or beneficial to the local population, only a small clique of the country’s political leaders, civil society, and intellectuals are aware of and understand the dynamics and benefits of this relationship.

Much of the reporting by the media focuses on the support received by South Sudan from foreign governments and the international community, as well as acknowledging and appreciating them for their generosity. The media rarely sheds light on the disadvantages of dependency, such as increasing vulnerability and the image this attribute creates for the country and its people.

The ailing economy, in light of the looming elections, is likely to compel South Sudan to seek financial assistance as well as technical and logistical support from its friends and the international community, who have already demonstrated a willingness to support, although with strict conditions such as reconstitution of the electoral commission, constitutional review, and restructuring the political parties’ council, including completion of the graduation of unified forces.

In fact, one of the reasons the government gives for extending the transitional period by twenty-four months is the limited resources, the need for adequate preparations, and the full implementation of important stipulations in the revitalized peace agreement prior to the elections in December 2024. This pronouncement prompted a public debate involving those who want elections at all costs, with or without adequate preparation, which is hoped to determine the country’s future.

TROIKA is also mounting pressure, urging parties and the government to prioritize and ascertain the country’s future through elections.

While elections are often believed to ensure a peaceful and nonviolent transition of leadership, timing, a country’s level of preparedness, and the conduciveness of an electoral environment must be taken into account as they are important determining factors for successful elections in which citizens’ involvement and participation are free, fair, secure, and transparent.

The looming elections in South Sudan will likely be held in an unsafe and insecure environment, thus making rigging and intimidation inevitable. The credibility of key institutions such as the electoral commission, judiciary and the absence of a disciplined army that would protect the entire electoral process will likely have undesirable effects on the outcome of the election.

Therefore, honest decisions must be made by the South Sudanese leaders to ensure the conduct of the election in a safe, secure, and peaceful environment so as to realize a citizen-centred government capable of addressing the country’s many problems, including economic depression and communal violence, among others, as a way to ascertain South Sudan’s integrity and reputation globally.

The author, Umba Peter Bosco, is a South Sudanese political scientist and conflict analyst reachable via umbapeter28@gmail.com.

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