Africa Outlook

South Sudan Resumes Issuing Passports after Month-long Stoppage

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South Sudan has resumed issuing passports after its German technology provider shut down the system for a month because the country failed to pay its bills, a senior immigratio­n official said in a recent statement.

South Sudan’s economy has been battered by a civil war, which is currently in its fourth year.

“We have resumed our operation and whoever is in need and wants to apply for national certificat­es and passports, we are ready to serve them,” Lieutenant General Majak Akech Malok, director general of Nationalit­y, Passport and Immigratio­n, told a news conference recently.

The national passports and immigratio­n office said in late November, 2017 that it had stopped giving out passports due to technical problems.

Then-Deputy Finance Minister Mou Ambrose Thiik, told Reuters that the passport and national identifica­tion server had been blocked by its host, German company Muhlbauer, after the Government failed to pay an annual software licence fee of around $500,000.

Akech made no mention of the government owing Muhlbauer any money and just said the stoppage was due to a “technical error”.

South Sudan’s main income is from oil but fighting has cut production to less than a third of pre-war levels. Public funds are scarce and civil servants and soldiers go unpaid for months, while hyperinfla­tion has rendered its currency almost worthless. Thiik was relieved of his job by President Salva Kiir in early December.

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