By FRED OLUOCH
In Summary
- Experts in South Sudan affairs say that leading politicians in the government as well as military top brass in government and rebels, are strongly opposed to efforts to establish mechanisms for transitional justice as per the August 2015 peace agreement, because they believe they are being targeted by the international community.
- This comes as a new survey by the University for Peace Centre based in The Hague, Netherlands, shows that over 50 per cent of the victims in the South Sudan civil war, said that retributive justice punishment was the most important, compared with just 15 per cent who prefer compensation.
- Since the civil war broke out in South Sudan in December 2013, over 60,000 have been killed, scores of women and girls raped and close to 16.000 million internally displaced after they houses and properties were looted or destroyed by both government forces and rebels.
South Sudan’s political and military elite are frustrating
the realisation of justice as the African Union drags its feet in
establishing a hybrid court to prosecute those who committed atrocities
in the three-year civil war.
Experts in South Sudan affairs say that leading politicians in
the government as well as military top brass in government and rebels,
are strongly opposed to efforts to establish mechanisms for transitional
justice as per the August 2015 peace agreement, because they believe
they are being targeted by the international community.
As a result, there have been behind-the-scenes lobbying by top
government officials for the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development
(Igad) — which is the guarantor of the peace agreement — to look for
ways of amending Chapter 5 that deals with “Transitional Justice,
Accountability, Reconciliation and Healing,” in a manner that does not
promote retribution.
“Chapter 5 has become the biggest obstacle to transitional
justice in particular and the implementation of the peace agreement in
general. The question is whether it can be repackaged to become less
threatening to the leadership because the country is running out of time
to write a new constitution and prepare for elections,” said Samuel
Dun, a South Sudanese lawyer.
Mr Dun, who was speaking at a seminar convened in Nairobi to
discuss transitional justice and reconciliation in South Sudan, added
that justice cannot be achieved in a country where institutions of
justice and systems have broken down and “there is no access to justice
in the first place.”
This comes as a new survey by the University for Peace Centre
based in The Hague, Netherlands, shows that over 50 per cent of the
victims in the South Sudan civil war, said that retributive justice
punishment was the most important, compared with just 15 per cent who
prefer compensation.
The unease over the issue of transitional justice emerged in
June when an opinion piece attributed to President Salva Kiir and his
then vice-president Dr Riek Machar was published by the New York Times, where the two argued that South Sudan needs national reconciliation and healing and not the potentially divisive trials.
The opinion piece divided the two leaders with presidential
spokesperson Ateny Wek Ateny, saying that it was written from the office
of the president with the permission of Dr Machar, while the rebel
leader’s spokesperson, James Gatdet Dak, dismissed it as a “fraud.”
Since the civil war broke out in South Sudan in December 2013,
over 60,000 have been killed, scores of women and girls raped and close
to 16.000 million internally displaced after they houses and properties
were looted or destroyed by both government forces and rebels.
Joseph Amanya, the co-ordinator for the Transitional Justice Working Group comprising seven civil society organisations, told The EastAfrican
that they have been lobbying the AU commission to start the process of
establishing institutions for transitional justice, but the challenge
has been lack of resources.
“The biggest problem is that it is the first experience for the
AU, and it is a big challenge taking into account the current state of
the August 2015 peace agreement. The AU doesn’t know whether the
agreement exists or it is alive,” he said.
But Dr Zacharia Diing Akol of the Sudd Institute said that the
people of South Sudan can start with the simple things that work for
them other than waiting for mega institutions to get justice.
“We can start by suspending our bitterness and raw anger for
revenge and instead initiate reconciliation and forgiveness among
communities based on long-held traditional justice systems of justice as
we wait for the national programme,” said Dr Akol.
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