South Sudan activist Peter Biar Ajak (centre) looks on during his first
appearance before the judiciary headquarters in Juba, South Sudan on
March 21, 2019. PHOTO | AKUOT CHOL | AFP
A South Sudanese court threw out charges including treason
against a prominent economist on Friday but said he still must face
trial on new charges of disturbing the peace over interviews he gave to
foreign media.
The case of Peter Biar Ajak, a former
child refugee who returned to his native South Sudan as an
internationally renowned academic, has thrown a spotlight on what rights
groups say is repression of dissent in Africa’s youngest country.
The
South Sudan country director for the International Growth Center which
is part of the London School of Economics, Biar was arrested in July
2018 and later charged with treason.
He had been critical of the way President Salva Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar approached peace talks to end a civil war.
“The
previous charges have been rubbished and dropped by the court because
the prosecution couldn’t prove each of those charges,” Ajak’s lawyer
Philip Anyang said.
However, judge Sumaya Saleh Abdalla ordered him to be tried on new charges.
“Biar and the other detainees inside the National Security
Prison participated in media interviews that have created fear and
insecurity in the public which is against the law,” the judge told the
special tribunal at the High Court.
Biar’s lawyer said he was innocent of all charges, which could fetch between six months and three years imprisonment.
South
Sudan, which became independent from Sudan in 2011 under a peace
agreement that ended decades of conflict, was swiftly plunged into civil
war because of a split between Kiir and Machar.
The two leaders finally signed a peace deal in September, promising to form a unity government by May 12.
Atmosphere of fear
Rights
groups say South Sudan’s security services have a history of detaining
people and subjecting them to torture and other ill-treatment, creating
an atmosphere of fear and self-censorship amongst activists and
journalists.
“The charges, at least in the case of
Peter, are an attempt to criminalize free expression and the legitimate
work of human rights defenders and activists,” said Human Rights Watch
South Sudan researcher Nyagoah Tut Pur.
At Friday’s
hearing the prosecution referred to an interview Biar gave to Voice of
America during a stand-off between prisoners and guards at the National
Security Service (NSS) headquarters on October 7, 2018.
Biar fled to the United States as a youth, was educated at Harvard and Cambridge and later worked at the World Bank.
Niki
Frencken, South Sudan researcher for Amnesty International, said the
tribunal, which is trying six other people including businessman and
philanthropist Kerbino Agok Wol, had not addressed the reason for his
original detention by the NSS.
“If you look at the last
couple of years, you see an increase in the power of the National
Security Service. It’s been operating outside the rule of law and
without checks and balances,” Frencken said.
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