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From Where Did Corruption in South
Sudan Come Into Our Lives? Southerners have always looked at governments as alien institutions which have to be resisted and fought because those governments in the past represented the interest of the oppressors (the Arabs).
Back in the 1960’s school children
have always had problems with their teachers who were predominantly Arabs
from the North and that was the start of the disrespect to the school
administration and the government authorities in line with the struggle for
freedom. School children were almost always at logger heads with their
teachers and indeed it was as if the real war was being fought in the class
rooms with the Arab teachers on one side and the southern students on the
other, nothing at all represents a teacher/pupil relationship which normally
existed in those schools prior to 1965.
It was in this that the real hidden
colors of the students would surface. Some would come up with dozens of
ghost names which they would register as students and cash the money, worse
still are those who dearly love their relatives and they would more than
readily invite them into the loot. It was chaos, but the Arabs wanted one
thing, they wanted the students to stay within the government controlled
garrison towns and they know that it would only come at a cost. Indeed it
did work. So, there were tribes whose fighters were mere illiterate villagers whom if recruited would end up as juniors due to their lack of education. But as recruitment started far away from the heart of the Anyanya Movement, the tribes with less educated fighters called many of their boys who were in schools and never ever fought in the ranks of the Anyanya and these people were recruited as the first Anyanya officers before even Ali Gbatala (Anyanya I hero) was considered for any job.
This was corruption right from day one
of the Addis Ababa, of course with the government representative at the
talks as the president of the first Anyanya cabinet whom he didn’t represent
at the talks nor was he neutral at those talks in his capacity as the head
of the Nimeiri Envoy to the negotiations. The seeds of institutionalized
corruption were sown. In some few well known ethnic groups, governments’ top officials including the ministers, usually accommodated dozens of other families within the compound allocated to them in the government residents. Some of these dependants constructed for themselves grass thatched houses within the compounds, while others occupy the servants quarters. The whole thing looked like a summer camping. But here comes the issue of feeding and maintaining this tribal camp and it all rests on the neck of the BIG MAN. He employs some as whatsoever within his ministry or department and adds the rest of the names to the ministries’ pay lists for monthly salaries. Some were students, other disabled people and aged relatives with their wives, children and additional ghost names.
These senior government figures still
looked at the public funds as an enemy fund though they were now the heads
of those government units. Is this because they have been left in the cold
for so long that even after been allowed into the warm room they still
failed to appreciate its warmth or were these institutions themselves built
on corruption such that whosoever gets on the top just find themselves
following a set up system of institutionalized corruption? This new trend was in the celebration every weekend at the Juba Hotel and it went on and on, the African chief style. With new in-laws, the dependency ratio even got higher and new ghost names had to appear on the pay lists plus new grass thatched houses in the government residential compounds to accommodate the new arrivals. What a generosity? It was indeed the generosity of the public funds.
As every weekend witness a marriage
party, the big towns and Juba in particular was thrown into a spree
celebrations and dancing mania. The ministers had also discovered for the
first time their strong ego for the Rumba, Soukous and the High Life music
to the extent that on one such evening a one time minister of Health who was
that evening acting as well as the minister of Education had to pass a
ministerial degree in the middle of the night asking all the girls in a
boarding school to be brought to one of those elites only dancing parties
because they were running short of women to dance with. A one-time minister of Youth and Sports was also known for his sexual scandals including the use of the government office for indecent behaviors. A late finance minister in the High Executive Council had a special designer golden wrist watch with his name inscribed in it. Mr. Speaker of the then Southern Assembly, was on tour to Iraq and came back with some money donated to the southern government and he just deposited the whole lot into his personal account until the whole scandal was exposed in “Al Hawadis Al Beirutia,” a monthly Arabic Magazine which sent the Regional Assembly wild at the time. Mr. L.R, a former director general of Education and later a Speaker of the Assembly ended with the Tekma Affairs of the 1970’s….. a very famous scandal with its roots up to the President of the Provisional High Executive Council (Mr. AAK).
Corruption was to the maximum most of
the time and public funds were really looted, embezzled, misappropriated and
openly taken away illegally without the culprits being questioned at all.
Inter ethnic school fights were
introduced by the people in authority and these nasty power hungry lunatics
knew exactly what it means if they can eliminate the students voices.
Because of the recurrent school fights, Student Unions were abolished or in
other situations all together banned by the notorious SSU gangs. This vacuum
kept the students apart thus creating an idea environment for rumors to be
generated ad circulated efficiently, and it did work by sowing the permanent
seeds of mistrust amongst the expected future leaders of the south. Each region had a co-ordination office in Khartoum, the national capital of the Sudan. These co-ordination offices were meant to co-ordinate the regions with the central government, but unfortunately they became the highest institutions of mass corruption and embezzlements in the entire country. The coordination offices became the new centers for nepotism, favoritism, and misappropriation of funds. Again here, the public funds were treated like enemy's funds, and all the abuses went on unaccountable for just was how it used to be the case in the south. Then came the second civil war (SPLM\SPLA) and the south was virtually cut off, a good thing for the coordination gangs of corruption as everything for the south is now decided in Khartoum rather than in the south. The mafia was established with the help of northern experts and it started to function right from inside the southern Sudan coordination offices in Khartoum. They sell all kinds of documents, scholarships, properties and even human flesh. Quotas of essential commodities remained to be approved when the central government knew very well that there was no any means of transporting them to the south. These quotas were of course approved to people in return for favors of all kinds-- even prostitution-- included.
Everything was sold and bought within
the North and the farthest trip would normally not go beyond the towns of
Kosti or El Obeid. Fellow south Sudanese who get the approvals end up
selling them to the northern merchants who would divert these commodities to
other markets in the north. This process left the fat cats of the
coordination offices drowned in illegal wealth and the viscous cycle of
embezzlement, polygamy, poverty, corruption was set into play again using
the public funds, still looked at as the enemy’s fund. This changed under the N.I.F and quotas became things of the past as the NIF government itself took over what used to be gang work, obviously because they were the black market gang masters before coming to power. Now if you want to continue in the game you have to play it according to the new rules which obviously request your loyalty to the NIF, and as a south Sudanese saying goes, "that you also have to have a NIF seal stamped between your buttocks." This is said to be a prerequisite even for political posts and any other favors with the system, something more or less like a NIF Master Card or so. All addicted and corrupt southern politicians saw nothing bad about that and many were seen in and out in the semi-annual cabinet reshuffles. If is once stamped, always stamped. Because of greed and lack of clear political agendas, many southern politicians had to convert to the ruling party’s religion (Islam), though none did it willingly as they were all victims of set ups. A prominent military general and son of a prominent Anglican priest was set up in a financial scandal when he was a state governor and he ended up visiting Mecca on a compulsory pilgrimage which obviously was to humiliate him and destroy his pride and prestige more than any thing to do with going to heaven.
Another southern minister in one of
the Northern States also converted to the NIF religion after been set up
with a woman. To escape punishment for adultery (a hundred or so lashes in
the public square) as he was already married to two or so wives, an event
which forced him into an unplanned marriage and a total disruption of his
previous marriages. The church kept quiet and the priest in question promoted himself to a Cardinal, I guess in line with the way the military junior officers always promoted themselves to generals after successfully staging a coup d'etat. In the chaotic situation which followed, the Anglican Church lost buildings and other properties which were widely believed to have been tampered with by the self appointed Cardinal.
These were just the tips of the ice
berg, but beneath the surface all kinds of ugly events were taking place.
Ministers were acquiring wealth from the budgets handed to them for running
ghost states, as those states were actually under the SPLA, and their
appetites for the public funds grew sharper and sharper. Yet they were
looting the public funds which they still consider to be the enemy’s funds.
The public money was tactically used by the NIF at this point and most of the politicians and their military personnel were again drowned in a sea of easy come money which was actually meant for political bribery in line with the six million dollars claimed to have been paid to the two PhD engineers who represented the different groups of the SPLA/M breakaway wings. While on the other side of the curtain, the SPLA/M mainstream was equally busy milking the entire charity organizations set up in the liberated areas. On many occasion the SPLM big shots holding the chair positions would just send away as many thousands of dollars from these charities to maintain their families in Australia, Britain, U.S.A and South Africa.
Yet another embezzlement of public
funds which the freedom-fighter thinks he rightly deserves to steal without
being questioned which to him it represented part of the wider struggle for
freedom. As the SPLM committees never turned up and such meetings never took place, the Head of State, Omer El Bashir, raised the issue in Juba in retaliation when the NCP was accused of dragging its feet in the implementation of the CPA by Salva Kiir. The investigations which followed indeed showed to the entire world that Salva Kiir and his crew are actually a bunch of thieves who have a very veracious appetite for public funds and up to this day no southerner outside the SPLM corrupted inner circle knows what has become of this money.
Thanks to the CPA or otherwise Omer El
Bashir would have had them stamped between their buttocks, converted to NIF
religion and sent on a humiliating pilgrimage to Mecca just like all those
who did similar things before them. The president of GOSS no longer has any creditability in as far as fighting corruption is concerned and many people have rightly suspected him of even being the God Father of the Family.
He is fond of forming toothless
committees and when culprits are identified they never appear in the courts
of law. What Mr. President should know is that these courts are created
there for purpose and if he is proving to be an obstruction to justice, then
one day he will stand before the courts to answer charges on the current
corruptions. Unfortunately we are hearing the contrary. The State is suffering from loads of ghost employees, unqualified public servants, widespread embezzlement of the public funds and hectic ethnic politics with the latter bringing the vice president of GOSS and the State governor to a face to face confrontation at a certain stage.
It is in this oil state that school
teachers from Kenya are paid in dollars, what an idea? Where have all the
Sudanese school leavers gone? We still hear of many south Sudanese who are
unemployed, and why not take up the teaching posts for even half the pay? In
this way you save the dollars and you employ you countrymen, or is it that
our national pride has come to mean nothing at this stage in our history?
The real intentions behind some of these policies are a bit dubious to
understand at first glance. Lately it has been reported that some people in authority are behind the relocation of certain tribes into lands far away from their home states with the intention of land occupation, something viewed by the host communities to be a planned strategy approved by the President of GOSS who has all this time kept quiet on this rather dangerous issue.
Now election will come and go, SPLM
will rig the votes and the south will go ablaze the Kenyan way and, believe
me, land issue will be in the heart of the turmoil to follow. The earlier
these issues are settled the better. Those who have ears, listen! We are corrupt by the virtue of our tribal settings where we pay loyalty more to our tribes than to the state, and we easily steal from the nation to give to our tribesmen, kinsmen and our extended families. We do not feel any remorse in the due course, because we look at the public as an enemy and the public funds and properties represent the enemy’s wealth rightfully to be looted.
Oh dear! Where are we coming from and
where are we going to? What does it signify if we can break into the police
custody and free our tribesmen, though we know that they are behind the bars
for crimes against the public by embezzlement of funds or murder in cold
blood? Do you think that we are really anywhere nearer to the civilization
which qualifies us for an independent nation in 2011? Taxation system is vague and crooked, and though taxes are collected at certain points, basically they end up in the pockets of the SPLA commanders and Salva Kiir’s cronies. There is nothing that the president does not know of. The more he knows of any corruption the more he keeps quiet, because possibly in every loot he has a kick back, otherwise what on earth can justify his indifference? Others blame his limited education which I think is good for a south Sudanese president otherwise why would we want a professor as a president? All we need is a south Sudanese citizen who has the nation at heart.
Salva Kiir unfortunately lacks the
basic qualities of even being compared to the Old-Days District
Commissioners who built and developed the whole of the African Continent
under the colonial rule. We may benefit from him at the Abyei Front-Line,
just think of it! It is a power that he had not shared with them when he was in office, but the bitter truth is that it is going to be as well a power that he is not going to share with them in any way once he gets re-elected into office, simply because that is the way it is being done in south Sudan and the Third world at large. Then if you ask yourself as to why you have to vote for him, your answer would astonishingly be a non-patriotic one, though you would be voting to a fellow freedom fighter, because your comrade is no longer with you in the liberation movement.
He has already joined the ruling
cliques-- in Khartoum first, then Juba. His ultimate aim now is to remain in
power for the sake of power itself otherwise with the unprecedented record
of the GOSS failure in delivering the basic services to the people, none of
these faces should really be seen again in the coming governments. Our freedom needs to be guided by a system which would guarantee a peaceful co–existence between our different communities otherwise very soon there wont be any difference in what is currently taking place in Abyei and Mairam and what will prevail in Nimule and Parajok.
There must come a day that south
Sudanese would identify themselves as protectors of public properties in our
country before we ever dream of any meaningful development. We are all part
of the public and stealing public funds is crime and a sin punishable by
both man and God. END
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