The Borneo Post (Sabah)

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

 ??  ?? File photo shows South Sudanese refugees at the Refugee Waiting Centre in Al-Eligat area along the border in Sudan’s White Nile state. — AFP photo
File photo shows South Sudanese refugees at the Refugee Waiting Centre in Al-Eligat area along the border in Sudan’s White Nile state. — AFP photo

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