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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, December 12, 2015
No Foreign Aid, No Peace in South Sudan
South Sudan’s leaders tore their country apart. Now they want Western donors to pay to put it back together again.

JUBA — South Sudan’s leaders spent the last two years locked in a brutal
war for power that has killed tens of thousands of people. Their forces
stand accused of war crimes, including the rape and massacre of
civilians, and the economy is near collapse.
But now that President Salva Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar have
struck a political bargain that brings them back where they started,
with Machar retaking his previous vice presidential post, the rest of
the world may have to pick up the tab.
The peace deal, signed under intense international pressure back in
August, is supposed to put the two men in a power-sharing transitional
government for three years before fresh elections can be held. It also
spells out steps to reunite and reform the country’s fractured army. But
so far the two sides have done little to put the deal into practice.
Fighting has continued in the northeast of the country, and the rebels
have not yet returned to the capital. The deadline to form a
transitional government passed on Nov. 26 with no result. Now an advance
team of rebels, not including Machar, is due in Juba on Friday for
talks aimed at implementing the deal, but it’s anyone’s guess if they’ll
show.
With the economy failing in the meantime, the current government says it
needs a bailout to meet its current obligations and to rebuild after
the war. In a speech to parliament on Nov. 18, Kiir admitted that his
government is nearly out of cash after it pre-sold oil exports, which
account for well over 90 percent of revenue. Fighting has already shut
down oil fields, slashing production by nearly half. The government now
receives under $10 per barrel, the result of low global oil prices and
the high fees it pays to use Sudan’s pipeline. Inflation is spiraling.
The dollar sells on the street for more than five times its official
rate, squeezing imports and putting basic goods like bottled water
beyond many citizens’ grasp.
“South Sudan needs to be assisted,” Foreign Minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin told Foreign Policyin an interview. “And the only way you do it is to seek loans from friendly countries, from the international organizations.”
But Benjamin’s entreaty has so far fallen on deaf ears.
“Right now, it’s our position and most of the donor community that we’re
not talking about a bailout; we’re not talking about budget support;
we’re talking about a phased approach where we will be trying to meet
whatever steps the government does,” said Gunnar Holm, deputy ambassador
to South Sudan for Norway, a member of the so-called “Troika” of top
donors to South Sudan that also includes the United States and Britain.
Such wariness to fund a Kiir-Machar government is understandable. There
are massive human rights concerns, and the two men built a legacy of
corruption in the eight years they ran South Sudan before the war.
There’s also the moral question of giving money to a government that
spent $850 million dollars to fund a war — and is still buying weapons —
while foreign nations spent billions of dollars on humanitarian aid to
keep alive hundreds of thousands of civilians affected by the fighting.
“We’re constantly in this discussion:
Why should we keep putting money on this when according to the latest report they’re in the market for more attack helicopters?” said one Western diplomat in Juba, who requested anonymity to speak freely.
Far from funding a bailout, donors say that there won’t be any increased
assistance at least until Machar returns to Juba and forms a
transitional government with Kiir. But even this may require spending:
One key sticking point involves 7,000 troops loyal to Kiir who are
supposed to redeploy outside Juba as part of a planned demilitarization
of the capital (so Machar feels safe to return). Kiir’s government says
it doesn’t have the money to build new barracks, so foreigners must step
in. Donors have rejected this excuse, so the vast majority of troops
are staying put — while the government points the finger at the
international community.
“If you genuinely really want peace for South Sudan, they should not be
running away from this,” Benjamin said. “This is encouraging chaos.”
It’s an example of an emerging dynamic wherein South Sudanese leaders
blame foreign reluctance to unlock additional funds for their own
failure to live up to agreements.
“They’ll put the shopping list out, we’ll shy away and say, ‘We’ll pay
for that, that, and that,’ and they’ll say, ‘See, you won’t pay [for
everything], so it’s your fault [if the peace agreement falls apart],'”
said the Western diplomat.
But donors may have little choice except to pay, according to Horn of
Africa researcher Alex de Waal, who serves as the executive director of
the World Peace Foundation. Writing in FP, de Waalpoints out that
South Sudan’s peace compacts have historically involved paying off
renegade generals in order to convince them not to fight.
“To keep the peace, South Sudanese leaders need enough funds, and the
discretion to use them, to grease the wheels of their patronage machines
and buy a real peace that’s not just on paper,” he argues. “If the U.S.
[South Sudan’s biggest donor] is to involve itself in fixing conflicts …
it needs to recognize this disagreeable truth.”
The patronage machine is likely to be further entrenched by the August
peace deal, because the proposed transitional government will need to
pay off rebels and government loyalists alike in order to keep the
peace.
“The peace agreement has not fundamentally challenged the nature of
political governance in South Sudan,” said Jort Hemmer, a senior
research fellow at the Dutch Clingendael Institute’s Conflict Research
Unit. “The elite compact broke down, now there’s been a re-stitch.”
Still, de Waal’s argument hasn’t swayed donors toward bilateral
assistance, so Benjamin says his government has turned to the World Bank
and the International Monetary Fund. Neither institution would speak
to FP for this article, but the United
States has reportedly begun discussions with the IMF on a “rescue
package.” No details are available on these talks, which began more than
two months ago.
Despite their reluctance to fund the patronage machine that could keep
the peace, major donors have signaled their willingness to pay for
development projects and governance assistance that don’t directly
support the warring leaders. That means funding health, education, and
civil society, as well as capacity-building projects to improve good
governance through the three-year transitional period.
“In terms of economic development, any help the transitional government
will need in terms of its capacity and whatever issues they might have
in terms of the practical aspects of running the government,
international partners are certainly willing to help,” said James
Donegan, deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Juba, adding
that this funding would still require South Sudan to take initial steps
toward reform.
Yet the development path is also fraught. From 2005, when a peace deal
brought Sudan’s Second Civil War to an end and paved the way for
southern secession six years later, until the outbreak of the latest
conflict in December 2013, foreign nations poured billions of dollars of
development aid into the south with little to show for it today.
“South Sudan has been a pilot for almost everything invented in donor
circles, and we have to conclude that things went wrong and it’s too
easy to just blame South Sudan’s leadership for that,” said Hemmer. “We
need to do some soul-searching and see where things could be done
better.”
Evidence of wasted development funds is easy to find. Health clinics remainunderstaffed and underused.
Schools and hospitals were built with donor funds, only to be
deliberately destroyed and looted during the war. Millions of dollars
poured into capacity-building projects propped up a government that
turned around and massacred its own people.
“It’s very difficult; it’s very delicate,” British Ambassador to South Sudan Tim Morris told FP.
“[Before the war] we had a level of belief in the leaders of this
country that was not justified, and it’s absolutely right that many of
the same individuals are still in power or are coming back to power.”
With the Kiir and Machar slated to lead the transitional government,
struggles over power and patronage are likely to undercut good
governance and service delivery even during peacetime. This leaves
donors with an unsavory choice: Pay generals to keep the peace or fund
development projects that may not work. Either way, South Sudan’s road
to recovery will be long and expensive — something donors may just have
to accept.
Image credit: ASHRAF SHAZLY/AFP/GettyImages

