KOWACH, South Sudan
Martha Nyanguour didn’t have time to bury her husband, son or granddaughter when they were killed by gunfire in September. Instead, the 50-year-old paid her respects by throwing bits of grass over their bodies, grabbed her remaining children and fled.
It had taken years for the
mother of seven to muster the courage to return to South Sudan and trust its
fragile peace deal ending a civil war. But weeks after she arrived in Atar town
in Upper Nile state, fighting erupted between militias aligned with government
and opposition forces.
“I thought if there was peace
I was supposed to go back to my land,” said Nyanguour, seated under a tree in
Kowach village in Canal Pigi county where she now lives with thousands of other
displaced people, five days’ walk through swamp water from her home village. “I
thought maybe there would be peace in the future, but now, hearing gunshots
daily, I think South Sudan will remain in war.”
In 18 months, South Sudan is
supposed to hold its first
presidential elections, the culmination of the peace agreement signed
nearly five years ago to pull the young nation out of fighting that killed some
400,000 people. While large-scale clashes have subsided, violence in parts of
the country persists, killing 2,240 people last year, according to the Armed
Conflict Location & Event Data Project. Earlier this month at least 20
people were killed and more than 50 wounded during inter-communal clashes in a
United Nations protection camp in the north of the country.
Implementation of the peace
agreement has been sluggish. The elections, originally scheduled for this year,
were postponed until December 2024. Other key elements of the deal have not
been implemented, sparking concern that the country could see a return to war
instead of a transfer of power.
“We are going to go for (the) electoral process without meeting the benchmarks that create a conducive environment for the conduct of elections,” said Edmund Yakani, executive director for Community Empowerment for Progress Organization, a local advocacy group. “The return of the country to violence is more evident than the country staying in stability.”
A permanent constitution still
has not been drafted. A census has not been conducted. Security arrangements,
considered the backbone of the agreement, are only partially complete. Some
83,000 soldiers from opposition and government forces are meant to unite in a
national army, but so far 55,000 have graduated and are yet to be deployed.
Others languish in training
centers with poor conditions and little food. Soldiers say many are rarely
paid. Locals involved with the security arrangements say there’s so little
trust that the main parties have held back key fighters, sending less seasoned
ones or new recruits.
In addition, Joshua Craze, a
researcher on South Sudan, says, “The peace agreement signed in 2018 has
enabled the government to fragment the opposition by encouraging defections and
setting commanders against each other, intensifying violent conflict.”
The opposition accuses the
government of lacking political will to hold elections so it can keep
plundering the nation’s resources, which include oil. “They don’t have genuine
political will to implement the peace agreement because they look at the
agreement from the angle that it is crippling their powers,” said Puok Both
Baluang, acting press secretary for the first vice president, head of the main
opposition and former rebel leader Riek Machar.
South Sudan has billions of
dollars in reserves but there is little transparency on where the money goes.
The country was voted the second most corrupt in the world last year by
Transparency International.
The international community is
exasperated with South Sudan’s lack of progress.
At a press conference in May,
United Nations representative Nicholas Haysom cautioned that the conditions did
not currently exist to hold transparent, free and fair elections. But some
diplomats are concerned that another extension to the peace deal would send a
negative message to South Sudanese citizens, investors and aid donors.
The government says it’s
serious about the peace process and will hold elections on time. During a
conference in May on reconciliation and healing, President Salva Kiir vowed
that “I will never take South Sudan and its people to war again.”
The capital, Juba, appears peaceful.
Billboards of Kiir and Machar shaking hands above the words “peace, unity,
reconciliation and development” line the streets. Children of the political
elites are returning with money and opening trendy restaurants, and
construction is booming.
But outside the capital is a
different reality.
The fighting that killed
Nyanguour’s family last year also sent tens of thousands fleeing, part of the
highest displacement levels since the peace agreement was signed, according to
a report by a U.N. panel of experts. It said government and opposition forces
played facilitating roles in the violence.
The conflict in Upper Nile cut
off access to healthcare, with some severely wounded people having to travel up
to four days by canoe to the closest clinic, aid workers said. “The biggest
issue was accessibility. It was hard to bring in supplies,” said Kudumreng
David, a supervisor for the International Medical Corps in Kowach.
Food has also become scarce as
fighting worsens conditions after years of floods and cuts in food aid. In
Kowach, some children rip leaves from trees into a pot for their only meal of
the day.
Many people outside Juba said
they didn’t even know elections were set for next year.
“We heard there’s peace but it
hasn’t reached here,” said Roda Awel, a resident of Kowach. “People are still
afraid.”
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