Juba, April 16 (Jonglei Times)-Cash-strapped South Sudanese government is
struggling to pay its employees as the country’s dire economic
situation worsens and inflation soars above 900 percent.
Government
employees, including civil servants, judges, university lecturers,
doctors and teachers have gone without pay for months because of the
economic collapse stemming from the ongoing three-year long civil war.
The
non-armed opposition leader for People Liberal Party official Peter
Mayen Majongdit blamed the delayed payments on greed, corruption and
mismanagement of oil money.
“The little
money from oil sales are squandered by individuals, they only care
about the presidential guards, and military, these are the security that
hold the grip of power,” Majongdit said.
UN
sanctions monitors alleged last month that South Sudanese government is
boosting its forces using millions of dollars from oil sales to
purchase weapons to fight rebellion and dissidents led by former exiled
vice president and rebel leader Riek Machar, despite millions people
facing starvation.
It says 97 percent
of South Sudan revenues come from oil sales however; half of the budget
or more is devoted to security, an accusation government denied.
Government hopes for bailout
Aggrey
Tisa Sabuni, presidential adviser on economic affairs, told Anadolu
Agency on Wednesday it was struggling to pay civil servants despite the
fact that government salaries eat up a whopping 89 percent of the annual
budget.
Sabuni said the Finance Ministry and the Bank of South Sudan were trying to figure out solutions to the acute economic crisis.
He blamed the government’s inability to pay salaries on the decline of crude oil production and the civil war.
"The
economy is facing strong headwinds, with major challenges being
experienced in the payment of civil servants and security forces; there
has been also great decline in oil production levels due to civil war,
this a challenge,” Subani said.
The economic situation may require pouring in more paper money but such a move would worsen the situation further, he said.
“The
short-term solution to economic situation is a bailout by international
community, IMF and World Bank could fill in the gap,” he said, adding
that so far there has been little or no commitment from any of these
financial institutions.
Two-thirds of diplomats unpaid
Nearly
two-thirds of South Sudan’s diplomats in its 24 missions abroad have
not been paid for six months due to the cash crunch in spite of the fact
that the number of staff at the embassies were reduced last year.
Mawien
Makol Ariik, Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman, said: “Yes, our
missions abroad are facing difficulties, there are no salaries for the
diplomats but they are not the only government employees suffering.
Teachers, nurses and civil servants in the country have not been
spared.”
He said missions abroad were suffering, but added he appreciated government efforts to resolve the problem.
The
government has also been slow in paying the salaries of other public
sector workers as well. A string of protests by judges, university
lecturers, doctors and teachers have been taking place since late last
year despite the government’s record of deploying its ruthless security
forces to crush public dissent.
Chol
Daniel, a secondary school teacher on government payroll said he has
been without pay for four months. He said the government had failed to
fulfill its promises of arrear increments and timely payment.
“The
government expects me to deliver service without appreciation of my
work, four months without salaries and we are still teaching, this is a
shame,” Daniel said.
Harassment from security forces
Dr.
James Christopher, who works at The Juba Teaching Hospital, said they
will consider going on strike if April too ends up without any pay for
them.
Christopher also said security operatives were continuing to arrest and summon his colleagues for voicing their demands.
“When
we demand our payment, they call you rebels and security threats and
arrest you, this will exacerbate the situation,” he said.
He
decried the insensitivity of the government to the plight of doctors,
nurses and midwives which constitute the most important unit of medical
care in the country. He added the current salary scale of the staff is
not enough to meet the rising cost of living in the city.
Tens
of thousands of people have been killed in South Sudan’s conflict which
erupted after a political fallout between President Salva Kiir and his
then deputy Riek Machar.
More than two million people have been displaced.
Nearly
half South Sudan’s population faces acute food shortages in a country
which boasts the third-biggest oil reserves in Africa.
Ethiopia currently hosts almost 830,000 refugees of which those from South Sudan account for 44 percent.
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