South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir met with political leaders on Wednesday to explore the viability of holding the long-delayed elections scheduled for December, according to his administration, as the United Nations cautioned that time was running out.
To the dismay of its people and the international community, the world’s youngest country has yet to hold elections, 13 years after gaining hard-fought independence from Sudan.
“The presidency, along with the leaders of major political parties, has resolved to seek technical advice from the electoral institutions on the feasibility of conducting upcoming elections,” Kiir’s office said in a Facebook post late Tuesday.
The meeting assessed the status of the faltering implementation of a 2018 peace agreement to end a bloody five-year civil war between forces loyal to Kiir and his arch-rival and now Deputy President Riek Machar.
Cabinet Affairs Minister Martin Elia Lomuro said the review was “aimed at providing a realistic timetable for political leaders to agree upon for the elections”.
The 2018 deal paved the way for a power-sharing government and laid out a roadmap for political transition and elections.
But in August 2022, South Sudan’s leaders agreed to extend the transitional period for another 24 months, to February 2025, and elections have been tentatively set for December 22 this year.
However, key tenets of the agreement are still incomplete, including the creation of a national constitution and the unification of Kiir and Machar’s rival forces.
Whether elections take place could also hinge on the outcome of peace talks in Nairobi between the South Sudanese government and holdout rebel groups that did not sign up to the 2018 pact.
The drawn-out consultation on the transition process “makes it difficult to treat 22 December as a definitive trigger in isolation from other critical factors”, Nicholas Haysom, the UN mission chief in South Sudan, said on Wednesday.
“Be that as it may, time is running out,” he told a UN Security Council meeting.
– ‘Perfect storm gathering’ –
The fragile nation has struggled to recover from the 2013-2018 conflict that killed 400,000 people and drove millions from their homes, and it is still plagued by political instability, ethnic violence, climate disasters and corruption.
One of the poorest countries on the planet despite vast oil riches, South Sudan’s struggling economy suffered another body blow when a key pipeline in its war-torn neighbour Sudan ruptured in February, sending the local currency into a tailspin and prices for basic goods soaring.
Last month, British charity Save the Children warned that parts of the country were on the “brink of famine” because of flooding during the current rainy season.
Haysom also said the country of an estimated 11 million people was teetering on the brink of disaster, including “the potential for once-in-a-lifetime flooding in September”.
“A perfect storm is gathering in South Sudan, as regards to its humanitarian and economic outlook,” he said.
“The costs of inaction at this juncture are too great -– should the elements of the perfect storm converge, it would outstretch the response capacity of the United Nations and risk derailing the country’s political transition.”