Oman Daily Observer

South Sudan to mark 10th anniversar­y without fanfare

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JUBA: South Sudan will mark 10 years of independen­ce on Friday with little fanfare as the troubled country battles economic chaos and a desperate hunger crisis after a bloody civil war.

The world’s newest nation was born on July 9, 2011, after a decades-long fight for statehood from Sudan, but was plunged into a brutal conflict two years later from which it has struggled to recover.

There will be none of the riotous scenes in the streets of Juba that accompanie­d that historic moment a decade ago. The anniversar­y has been marked only a few times since, with the last formal celebratio­ns in 2014.

Government ministers on Wednesday raised concerns at a cabinet meeting about anniversar­y events being held in the midst of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“His Excellency (President Salva Kiir) directs that the public, the citizens of South Sudan, celebrate in their own houses,” Deputy Informatio­n Minister Baba Medan told reporters.

The minister said Kiir is scheduled to address the public “so everyone will see it on his own TV, or hear through your own radio, so that we also be avoiding any health issue”.

A ceremony to swear in the MPS has been cancelled, without

any official explanatio­n.

The only formal event appears to be a fun run in the capital Juba. Medan said it would commence at 5 am (0200 GMT) and encouraged people to take part.

Kiir blamed internatio­nal sanctions for keeping South Sudan poor and depriving the state of revenue.

“This is why we are not celebratin­g the 10th anniversar­y the way the people would have wanted it to be,” he told Kenyan broadcaste­r Citizen TV on Wednesday.

South Sudan enjoyed immense internatio­nal goodwill and billions of dollars in financial support when its people voted overwhelmi­ngly in a 2011 referendum to secede from the north.

But in late 2013, the country collapsed into a bloody civil war that killed nearly 400,000 people and forced millions more to flee their homes.

The conflict ruined the nascent country’s economy and basic services for its 12 million people are in short supply, and financed almost entirely by foreign aid.

The young country faces its worst hunger crisis since independen­ce, with some 60 per cent of the population enduring severe food shortages, some close to famine, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) says.

 ?? — AFP ?? Residents of Juba in South Sudan celebrate in the streets the birth of their new nation on July 9, 2011.
— AFP Residents of Juba in South Sudan celebrate in the streets the birth of their new nation on July 9, 2011.

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