South Sudan’s cabinet a burden to taxpayers - opposition leader
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By Julius N. Uma

August 27, 2011 (AWEIL) - An opposition leader in newly independent
South Sudan has warned that the country’s new cabinet could have grave
financial implications on the country’s finances, given the large
number of ministers.

Speaking the day after President Salva Kiir Mayardit officially
unveiled his long-awaited list of 29 ministers and 27 deputies, Onyoti
Adigo Nyikec, an opposition leader in the national assembly said the
president should have maintained the previous cabinet’s size.

“The long awaited cabinet still leaves a lot to be desired. The huge
cabinet will definitely force the government to expand its budget to
meet the final needs of these constitutional post holders,” Nyikec
told Sudan Tribune by phone.

According to the member of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement for
Democratic Change (SPLM-DC), South Sudan’s new cabinet should have
comprised of “new faces”, accusing the president of simply “recycling
his old guards” in different portfolios.

“There are ministers who failed to deliver services to the people in
the previous government. Now that they have been re-appointed, I
personally do not think they will live up to the expectations of the
citizens of this country,” he said.

The southern opposition leader’s Nyikwec’s views were re-echoed by
Alfred Sebit Lokuji, a renowned university lecturer and independent
consultant on governance and development issues.

"There is nothing impressive about this cabinet. Almost old faces have
returned. The new faces in the cabinet are accountable. I see Dr.
Betty Achan, Agnes Poni, Emmanuel Lowila and General Alison Magaya as
new faces. The rest are old guards," he said.

"There should be no celebrations. Let’s first wait and see," Lokuji warned.

REGIONAL BALANCE

Both Nyikec and Lokuji admitted that the composition of the current
cabinet largely represented a regional balance, contrary to earlier
speculation that the president was likely to appoint another Dinka and
Nuer dominated cabinet.

“If you consider the key ministries like foreign affairs, defense,
interior and finance, one will definitely see some element of equal
representation unlike in the previous arrangement which was regionally
imbalanced,” Nyikec said.

During South Sudan’s independence celebrations on July 9, Kiir pledged
to form a regionally balanced cabinet as a mechanism to address
numerous complaints from citizens. Kiir used his speech to emphasise
the importance of effective service delivery and warned against
laziness and corruption.

South Sudan officially became Africa’s newest nation after its
population overwhelmingly voted for separation in a January
self-determination referendum. The vote was a key part of Sudan’s 2005
Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), which ended over two decades of
war between North and South Sudan.

(ST)

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