South Sudan facing crisis at its 32 embassies as cash dries up

What you need to know:

  • Foreign Affairs Spokesperson Mawien Makol told Xinhua that the delays are due to economic crisis.

JUBA

South Sudan has said it is facing a cash crisis at its foreign embassies stemming from salary delays and risks eviction for failure to pay rent.

Mr Philip Thon leek, Chairperson of Specialized Committee for Foreign Relations in transitional Parliament, told Xinhua in an interview in Juba that the government is making frantic efforts to rescue the diplomats who may be at risk of eviction due to rental dues.

“The diplomats have been going without salaries for about five months, and some of them are being threatened to be dragged to court for failing to pay rents by their landlords,” Mr Leek said.

In March, Juba said it will downsize the number of staff in its embassies across the world in order to cut costs due to economic slump stemming from a two-year civil war. 

The move comes amid unconfirmed reports that some of the foreign missions have been served with eviction orders for not paying rent while some staff have not been paid for months due to economic crisis.

“Our diplomats don’t get their salaries regularly because scarcity of hard currency has disadvantaged them from paying their house rents abroad,” Leek stressed.

The lawmaker explained that the situation has been exacerbated by the current economic crisis that has made foreign currencies to be very scarce, coupled with the large number of diplomats deployed in foreign missions abroad.  

Since South Sudan gained its independence from Khartoum in 2011, the world youngest nation has so far opened 32 missions worldwide. 

Foreign Affairs Spokesperson Mawien Makol told Xinhua that the delays are due to economic crisis, coupled with recent fighting that forced former first vice president Riek Machar to flee the country.