publish time

15/08/2024

author name Arab Times

publish time

15/08/2024

Nicholas Haysom, then United Nations envoy in Afghanistan, speaks during a press conference in Kabul on Feb. 18, 2015. (AP)

DAKAR, Senegal, Aug 15, (AP): South Sudan is not ready to hold its first post-independence elections in December and political players are discussing whether voting should be held this year, the UN's top envoy in the troubled African country said Wednesday.
Nicolas Haysom told the UN Security Council that the consultations make it difficult to treat the election date of Dec 22 announced last month by the National Elections Commission "as a definitive trigger in isolation from other critical factors.”
The vote, which would be the first since South Sudan gained independence from Sudan in 2011 after a long conflict, is meant to be the culmination of a peace agreement signed five years ago to pull the world’s newest nation out of a civil war largely based on ethnic divisions. Fighting between forces loyal to the current president, Salva Kiir, battled those loyal to the current vice president, Riek Machar, killing some 400,000 people.
Last December, Haysom outlined a series of conditions needed to hold credible and peaceful elections. In April, he told the Security Council the parties hadn’t implemented a "critical mass” of the key steps for free and fair elections - and he told the UN’s most powerful body Wednesday that his assessment is the same today.
On a positive note, he said the Elections Commission has started assessing "the ground-level infrastructure and facilities required for a conducive environment for conducting elections,” and 29 political parties have been registered.
The UN peacekeeping mission continues "to support the creation of an enabling environment for elections in South Sudan whenever they are held,” focusing on its mandate to help protect civilians, Haysom said..
He said there are concerns among large segments of civil society, political parties, the Commission on Human Rights and the international community about a bill recently passed by South Sudan's parliament that grants the National Security Service the power to make arrests without a warrant.
Critics of the security bill say it contradicts "their aspirations for open civic and political space” to build a democratic society and is incompatible with the spirit of South Sudan's transitional constitution and its human rights obligations, he said.