South Sudanese SPLA soldiers are pictured in Pageri in Eastern Equatoria
state on August 20, 2015. South Sudan lawmakers have passed a
controversial Bill restricting numbers of foreign aid workers, sparking
fears it will hinder efforts to help millions in need in the war-torn
young nation. PHOTO | AFP
JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN
South Sudan
lawmakers have passed a controversial Bill restricting numbers of
foreign aid workers, sparking fears it will hinder efforts to help
millions in need in the war-torn young nation.
The
Non-Governmental Organisations (NGO) Bill, passed by parliament on
Wednesday, means no more than a fifth of aid workers can be from abroad,
a level many aid workers believe is simply not viable.
Aid
agencies must "ensure that not less than 80 per cent of the employees
are South Sudanese nationals at all managerial, middle and junior
levels," the bill read, according to a copy seen by AFP Thursday. It
must still be signed by the president to pass into law.
Aid workers contacted asked not to be named following the Bill.
They
said there was also concern at a clause making the issuing of a "false
statement" about the bill punishable by up to three years in prison, as
well as a possible 50,000 South Sudan pound fine, over $2,000 at current
rates.
Aid agencies already employ large numbers of
South Sudanese -- often far higher than the 80 per cent level now
required -- but not at senior levels or among technical specialists.
Civil
war began in December 2013 when President Salva Kiir accused his former
deputy Riek Machar of planning a coup, setting off a cycle of
retaliatory killings that have split the poverty-stricken, landlocked
country along ethnic lines.
Tens of thousands have died
in two years of war, more than 2.3 million people have been driven from
their homes and 3.9 million South Sudanese face severe food shortages.
East
Africa's Igad bloc last week called on rival forces to allow food into
conflict zones on the brink of famine, where aid workers have warned
tens of thousands may be dying of starvation.
Foreign agencies often provide the only source of healthcare for vast areas.
Fighting
continues despite an August peace deal, and the conflict now involves
multiple militia forces who pay little heed to paper peace deals, driven
by local agendas or revenge attacks
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