The Borneo Post

Famine-hit S. Sudan to charge up to US$10,000 for foreigners’ permits

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JUBA: War-ravaged South Sudan has hiked work permit fees 100fold for foreign aid workers to US$ 10,000, officials said, despite suffering from famine.

The world’s youngest nation has been mired in civil war since 2013, when President Salva Kiir fired his deputy Riek Machar, sparking a conflict that has increasing­ly split the country along ethnic lines. Last month, the United Nations declared that parts of the country are experienci­ng famine, the first time the world has faced such a catastroph­e in six years.

Nearly half the population, or about 5.5 million people, is expected to lack a reliable source of food by July.

Despite the catastroph­e, Juba will now charge US$ 10,000 for foreigners working in a ‘profession­al’ capacity, US$ 2,000 for ‘ blue collar’ employees and US$1,000 for ‘casual workers’ from March 1, the labour ministry said in a decree.

Edmund Yakani, executive director of the local charity Community Empowermen­t for Progress Organisati­ons (CEPO), said the move aimed to reduce the number of humanitari­an workers.

“Actually, the work permit is too expensive for humanitari­an workers, since over 90 per cent of the foreigners seeking to work in South Sudan are humanitari­an workers”, he told Reuters.

Aid groups say they often face restrictio­ns in South Sudan.

In December, Juba expelled the country director of the Norwegian Refugee Council ( NRC) after security agents held him without charge for more than 24 hours.

The UN defines famine as when at least a fifth of the households in a region face extreme food shortages, acute malnutriti­on rates exceed 30 per cent, and two or more people in every 10,000 are dying each day.

The fighting has uprooted more than 3 million people.

Continuing displaceme­nt presents “heightened risks of prolonged (food) underprodu­ction into 2018,” the United Nations said in a report last month. — Reuters

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