South Sudan denies marginalising minority tribes in government

May 18, 2013 (JUBA) - South Sudan has denied allegations that it is
marginalising minority tribes in the government, asserting that those
making such claims are individuals acting out of their own interests.

Speaking to Sudan Tribune on Saturday, South Sudanese minister of
information and broadcasting services Barnaba Marial Benjamin
described the ruling Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) – led
by president Salva Kiir Mayardit and elected in a 93% landslide - as
the “people’s government”.

“It represents all the different faces of our communities. The voices
talking about marginalisation are individuals wanting to satisfy their
own interest not the interest of those they claim to represent”, he
said.

Marial was reacting to claims by the Jonglei-based rebel leader, David
Yau Yau, that he is fighting for the creation of an independent state
for minority tribes in the region, claiming they have been sidelined
at all levels.

In exclusive interview with Sudan Tribune on Friday, Yau Yau, who
comes from the minority Murle tribe, said the rebel group was fighting
for equality for all, including the press.

“Are you now free to write anything about the government? Some of you
[journalists] are being killed because of telling our people what you
should tell them. This is why you are afraid to talk about corruption,
about tribalism, about the deliberate marginalisation of minority
tribes in the country, especially in Jonglei”. Yau Yau said, in
reference to restrictions on press freedoms in South Sudan.

“We are also fighting for good governance, respect for diversity,
adherence to rule of law, respect for human dignity which actually is
one of the core values for human rights and development, you name
them”, Yau Yau said.

The rebel leader also claimed SPLM’s leadership had buried the values
for which the decades-long north-South civil war was fought to win
independence from neighbouring Sudan.

“We fought together but now there are people who think they fought the
war alone and have decided to isolate others, especially the minority
like Murle, the Anyuak, the Jie, and the Kachipo in Jonglei. The same
thing is also happening in other states where there are minority
tribes. The minority tribes do not have a voice at any level of
government”, he said.

“We are fighting for our own freedoms, our rights and we will get it.
We will get our own state where can we be represented at will … Our
people will choose who they want [as elected representatives] not
anybody else”, he added.

Marial has dismissed the assertions made by the rebel leader, saying
he is fighting only for his own interests and those of the Murle
community.

“I said before, the current government is inclusive. In fact, our
people are now complaining that this government is big. They want it
to be trimmed. They need small government so that financial resources
can be used to support other developmental projects”, he said, adding
that Yau Yau’s claims were incorrect and that he is fighting no
genuine cause.

“He is fighting because he lost the [2010] election which is [in] his
own interest. It does not represent the interest of the majority of
the Murle community”. Marial said, describing Yau Yau “as one of those
who do not want to see South Sudan emerging as stable, strong,
prosperous and viable young nation because they have been overwhelmed
with individual interests”.

Marial maintained the Murle community was well-represented in the
SPLM, including a number who held sensitive positions.

“The under-secretary of our finance is a Murle. There is a minister at
the cabinet level. They are also in the parliament represented in the
state parliament and in the executive”, he added.

A former theology student, Yau Yau launched a rebellion against the
SPLM after a failed bid to join state parliament in 2010 elections. He
later accepted an amnesty offer by Kiir in 2011 to join the South
Sudanese army (SPLA), only to rebel again in April 2012.

(ST)

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to