Kiir Anti-Corruption war is nothing but blooper

    Article
    Comments (4)

email Email
print Print
pdfSave
separation
increase
decrease
separation
separation

By Isaiah Abraham

September 21, 2011 — The government of the people of South Sudan known
then as Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS) that has officially became
a republican government has struggled to minimize if not to weed out
corruption in its system. Numerous attempts by various groups within
the same government were used but all have yielded no fruitful
results; this is as far as arrests and prosecutions are concern.
Artists have also joined the fight against corruption in their written
lyrics or songs, but all the same, little has been achieved. The
swindlers as ever have been on the business of stealing public money
at will. The Treasury is losing millions of pounds every year.

The practice (corruption) comes in many forms, but in our context,
financial malpractices have swayed other forms of corruption in our
society. Our talks concentrate on money and only money. It is also
good to start from where it hurts most- money. But how did thieves
make it into the Treasury in the first place? Well, there are wild
contracts, medical treatments or referrals, assistances and allowances
everywhere, only be a few. Contracts are the worse, about 80% cases of
corruption.

There are no proper checks and balances at the Treasury unfortunately.
The Treasury Procurement Procedures are loose loops used to enter
dubious schemes in the tunes of millions of pounds. Questionable
international pretenders come to South Sudan from a well placed
personalities and within no time, these people wire back millions of
pounds to their respective countries, something Uncle Elijah (former
Central Bank Governor) had tried to stop, but somewhere not effective
after Khartoum ‘jammed’ the electronic banking system.

Interestingly, the head of state and his team are still with aura to
come to the public and offer pronouncements everyone has already heard
them making. Please, time for big mouthing and rhetoric about that
vice has long gone! What people want and want done now is to follow
your earlier pronouncements with actions. Mr. President, sir, people
had expected you to expedite the Anti-Corruption Bill of 2011 before
the National Legislative Assembly. That is the first step you ought to
take if you want everyone to take you serious. That Bill is where we
find Prosecution Powers that were missing for years; without teeth,
the Anti-Corruption Unit won’t bite and certainly you have nothing you
could do at the top.

Who is going to prosecute thieves involve in the Dura Scam? What of
the Nile Commercial Bank beneficiaries, who will dare questioning the
implicated? How about land grabbing you talked about? Ministry of
Justice has never tried a chicken, let alone a human being. Courts are
rotten, as corruption fights back like a bear. Mr. President time is
up for you to work through institutions and within the law. Going
public through our beloved Vice President can’t help the situation. In
short, your so-called five steps to wipe out corruption are hog wash
meant for public relation gimmick and nothing more.

Look, we have been there few years ago, even if no one could deny your
good intention to fight corruption, but don’t forget that this is a
monster, that doesn’t need emotions alone, the damage is done and
already there; what you need done right now is to use institutional
legal means, one of which is that bill before the House, and second is
to visit reports made by Anti-corruption about some remedies that are
of long term in nature. To bring back money from oversees or wherever
is easy said, but involve strong legal institution empowered by the
law to do just that.

The public have heard big scam only for culprit to be mysteriously
hauled out from their ministerial jobs and no action is followed for
the money or assets to be returned. This hyper phobia brings us to
another key recommendation for fight against corruption, namely the
need to sing or threaten less but execute much. The public is tired of
lip service, we want one or two big fish brought before the law and
tried. These people are criminals and are still around us, why? What
they have done to the people of South Sudan is bad. Leaders ought to
live by example and what we are seeing and hearing is appalling and is
stark opposite of what we have charted out in our manifestos.

I was glad to hear that President Kiir never returned a scandalous
grumpy minister who happened to wed a Ugandan granny using a chopper.
You started to ask yourself whether this old man is crazy or the
system is crazy. Others have returned smiling all they way back to
offices after they reports in their respective ministries criminalized
them. The fight against corruption was lost long time ago and time to
shout less is here.

I wholeheartedly however welcome the president proposal to import
brains from the outside. This is a brilliant idea; the drawback though
could be the kind of experts we are looking for from the outside.
Let’s try friendly countries, especially our sister countries in East
Africa particularly Rwanda and Tanzania, then we can stretch southward
to Botswana and Namibia if need be. These countries have over the
years developed sustainable economies growth from their meager
resources, something we could copy and ‘paste’.

Mr. President needs support from the top, otherwise, am seeing his 100
days pledge coming to naught. No wonder, we are already near half way,
and no single primary school (they talk of 30), clinic or road that
will be finalized within the next seventy three days. The man has run
out of fresh strategies on how to address the issue of corruption in
his system. Anti-corruption latest Report that was presented to
Parliament last week was a Pandora Box, an embarrassment piece for the
government. The Report talks of 123,000 Million United States Dollars
scams; the very money we badly need to finish up the road leading to
Malakal town or from Malakal to Ethiopian border. Malakal town is one
town in our system that badly needs an out let road for goods and
services.

We can bemoan one problem, and never take our time and ask ourselves
where the rain started to beat us. We had deep crisis in the market,
as prices jump the roof, and government did nothing. There were
brewing troubles in the Blue and South Kordofan States, but Juba
looked away until our black people there were chased away like no
humans. Juba could have gone somewhere and sought peaceful solutions
to crisis there. We also had our brothers and sisters slaughtered in
Uror County in Jonglei State by ruthless murderers from Murle tribe,
and the government paid lip service, if any, even the Governor didn’t
think of resigning.

Please, Mr. President enough with your talk shows about corruption,
the thing will not go away through mere repetition of the same tone,
talking yes but also remember, we are humans with limitations as to
tolerance ability. I salute the job well done by Dr. Paulino Riak, of
the Anti-Corruption Commission and her team. They have sounded an
alarm again and again, but apparently no one is ready at the top to
help fight effectively. To be exact, the top has been slow or
dally-dilly something not nice in the fight against corruption. Madame
Riak is a disciplined public officer whose public and private scrutiny
makes her the best person for the job. His Assistant Mr. John Saverio
Ayik is a distinguished lawyer and a nationalist, a perfect
combination that could have spell well for the public. Now that the
public jury has shifted to Parliament and the Executive, please we
want someone ‘punch in the face’ before we hear so-called critical
steps. Dr. Machar never washes dirty linen of these people. they are
corrupt.

Isaiah Abraham lives in Juba; he’s on [email protected]


The views expressed in the 'Comment and Analysisi>' section are solely
the opinions of the writers. The veracity of any claims made are the
responsibility of the author not Sudan Tribune.

If you want to submit an opinion piece please email it to
[email protected]

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "JFD 
info" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/jfdinfo?hl=en.

Reply via email to