South Sudanese President Salva Kiir. FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
By JOSEPH ODUHA in Juba
A US anti-graft agency claims there was massive corruption in the South Sudan military.
Enough Project says in its report released last week that there
was rampant corruption in the military ranks of the war-ravaged country,
despite the widespread suffering of the people.
The report is titled: Weapons of Mass Corruption: How Corruption in South Sudan’s Military Undermines the World’s Newest Country.
It identifies the corrupt activities as including procurement
fraud, irregular spending and bloated troop rosters, featuring thousands
of “ghost” soldiers.
Proliferating insecurity
“The effect of corruption in proliferating insecurity in South
Sudan cannot be underestimated. The country’s politicians can only begin
to realise the fruits of security for their citizens if they tackle the
graft in the army,” the report reads.
“On paper, South Sudan’s legal and institutional frameworks
enshrine civilian, not military leadership. The SPLA is meant to
protect, defend, and hold itself accountable to the South Sudanese
people. But the destructive system and practices that have developed now
instead work against these purposes, and the South Sudanese people who
face great personal risks have paid the highest price,” it says.
Being undermined
The report further called upon the international community to
steadfastly support the South Sudanese people, especially those who
tried to uphold the institutions that were being undermined.
“The incentives that reward violence and theft must be changed.
The international community needs to help make war costlier than peace
for the leaders and create targeted and personal consequences for
corrupt war-mongers,” the report says.
Enough Project describes South Sudan as a nation where resources
were scarce and contested, and many people were unable to provide for
their basic needs.
The opportunity
Political appointments in South Sudan empower certain
individuals to access public accounts and manage scarce financial
resources, the US agency says further.
It recommends that the international community, with US
leadership, has the opportunity to create consequences for these
predatory actors that harm the South Sudanese and the consequences
should include: sanctioning the army commanders who loot the state and
the investigation and freezing of the assets of the corrupt commanders.
Last year, the Enough Project also released a report accusing
the South Sudanese leaders, including President Salva Kiir and rebel
Riek Machar, of profiting from the war by diverting state assets to
foreign countries.
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