South Sudan President Salva Kiir. The government has rejected claims
that the leadership has diverted millions of dollars from the national
oil company to fund the ongoing civil conflict. PHOTO | AFP
South Sudan's government has rejected claims that the leadership
has diverted millions of dollars from the national oil company to fund
the ongoing civil conflict.
"The report was intended to
damage the image of the president and the government of South Sudan,"
Information Minister Michael Makuei told the BBC.
“We
all know that Global Witness is US-funded and America has taken an
anti-government stance, and Global Witness is an anti-government
organisation," he added.
The report in question linked
the state oil company Nile Petroleum (Nilepet), directly to arms
transfers and the financial benefit of President Kiir’s closest
advisers.
The company, it says, operates in secrecy,
and the report details how this secrecy has been used to finance
military operations, arms transfers to ethnic militias, and conceal the
looting of millions of dollars meant to help imports of essential goods.
South
Sudan’s security forces have also been accused of atrocities in the
country’s civil war, including ethnic cleansing and rape.
Nilepet has denied the allegations, and suggested the evidence collected may have been forged.
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