HomeNEW REPUBLIC.OPED: CHRISTOPHER OPOKAWith our thieving police...

With our thieving police off duty, independence day saw no security breaches

– We sang songs of joy, we laughed our hearts out, we praised unsung heroes, and we partied until dawn. Our regular thieving police and military for some reason could not stop vehicles, nor check the cheerful mob. No checkpoints were functional; and there were no serious security breaches.

BY CHRISTOPHER OPOKA


I saw malnutrition in the reddened hair of the children and registered thousands-fold infections in the eyes that turned to sheepishly stare at me as I passed. I examined goiters that spoke of lack of minerals and of typhoid problems. I listened to hundreds of coughs. I examined infected bullet wounds, badly healed machete scars, and the lessons of HIV-Aids. And, there I stood, with a modest flag of a Republic born, studying the pride of a Republic in suffering.


It could not be the issue of tribes because there are so many. It could not have been regions because there are so many too. It could not be religion because there are so many, and it is a fact that many of our forefathers nor believed in the biblical God, or the Koranic Allah. It could not be resources because we have oil, gold, uranium, the Nile waters, Timber, and vast arable land. It could only be an idea that would encompass all those things. A conundrum, but one that other nations like India, Brazil and Malaysia faced and — fundamentally solved.

An idea that would encompass us all as one people has for a long time eluded our history. But until the previous two weeks, we had never witnessed a unity far beyond what the 1972 Addis-Ababa Agreement brought, far stronger than the remains of the 1998 Khartoum Peace Agreement. Unity even eluded the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement.

No Thieving Police

The Unity of the masses was far more joyful than the anger of the Egyptian, Libyan, Tunisian uprisings combined. We sang songs of joy, we laughed our hearts out, we praised unsung heroes and we partied until dawn. Our regular thieving police and military for some reason could not stop vehicles, nor check the cheerful mob. No checkpoints were functional; and there were no serious security breaches.

We are a multitude of ethnic groups, tribes, religions and languages, the largest country then in Africa (and even now we shall be almost the size of Uganda and Kenya combined) and with the potential to be one of the richest countries in the region. We are the country where all this worked.

We must rise and rise high. We must stand and be counted, either for failing in our attempt to bring sanity to our land and people, or for invigorating the fight and desire for a better Greater Equatoria foremost, but for a united South Sudan whence the others align with us for this noble cause.

We have what unites us and this bondage must be nurtured and fed daily, hourly, every month and every year with the best, purest of milk brands, with the best semi-solid foods, with the best, and noblest of ideologies that respect the freedom and rights of others and their economic prosperity as our very own.

Opoka Christopher is a Journalism Trainer and can be reached at  HYPERLINK “mailto:krismakes@live.com” krismakes@live.com

- A word from our sponsors -

sponsored: GRE. GMAT. TOEFL. IELT CLASSESspot_img

Most Popular

More from section

- A word from our sponsors -

spot_img

Read Now

How a South Sudanese Village Lured Government with $7 Contributions to Gravel a Flooded, Muddy Road

Joyce Angee, walks to nearby Jebel Kujur rock every morning to collect rocks.  She splits the rocks into gravel for sale. “It’s not really easy my son, but when they tell you it’s the government, what do you do?” Angee, tells timeoftheworld.com about why she contributed money...

In South Sudan, a Band of Risk-takers Quietly Trek to Violence-ravaged Farmlands to Save their Crop – and their families

Magwi county was fast becoming the country's food basket, its farmers supplying more than 200 metric tonnes of humanitarian food to World Food Programme (2021) before communal violence broke out in a region that was already filled with rebel fighters, displacing thousands of farming families. ...

In Sudan-South Sudan Contested Abyei Region, Farmers Embrace Hoes, Group Work, and Guns – But, At Least, They Come in Peace

“Young people carry out patrols to fend off surprise attacks on their farming parents - to ensure no one could launch a surprise attack on us in our farms." Communities, responding to gun-related forced displacement of farm labour and to fears of impending attacks, farm in groups,...

Search for Healing: For Families Whose Loved Ones Where Disappeared, It Takes a Village to Overcome

“Most of us had psychological problems. Our husbands were young; they went missing, were killed, imprisoned when we were young and we had to raise our children single handedly. As women, we did not have sources of income to support our families. There was need for...

Michele Anekeya’s Next Task is Deepen Hudson Sandler in E.Africa

Michelle Anekeya joins Hudson Sandler from Hill+Knowlton Strategies, as a Partner, bringing with her 16 years’ experience in integrated marketing and communications, to develop Hudson Sandler’s East African operations. “Africa is a key strategic market for Hudson Sandler. We are proud to work with Africa’s leading businesses, foundations...

South Sudanese, Suffering Highest Data Rates in the Region, Face New Rate Raises

The increase, effective September 15, is meant to enable telcos expand across the country, the regulator, the National Communications Authority announced. Yet, going by the comments of some, the country might end up with expanded physical infrastructure, but with fewer users as citizens give up. Based...

Costly Fertiliser: In Kigali, AGRA Pledges Bold Action; Activists Have A Different Idea of Bold: Defund AGRA

The Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA)’s annual forum takes off in Kigali, Rwanda, pledging “Bold Action for Resilient Food Systems.”  But the ‘bold action’ activists want is for AGRA’s donors to stop funding an initiative they say reinforces dependency on foreign inputs, such as expensive...

Up Next: 12,600 census jobs funded by the World Bank

Except, it is all a scam, the World Bank has said, as the advert makes rounds on social media, part of a growing trend in which scammers use the allure of international agencies to entrap South Sudan’s jobless youth. “The World Bank Group would like to confirm and...

Anti- Synthetic Fertilizer Sentiments As AGRA forum Comes to Kigali

Sanctions and war-related disruptions in the supply of synthetic fertilizer raw materials, effectively weaponizing fertilizers and hurting farmers call for a shift away from synthetic fertilizers. This is the gist of the report released by INKOTA, a German development organization. Meanwhile a network of over 200 African civil...

Bruised South Sudan Employers Figure it Out: Bring Attitude, not Diplomas or Skills, to Job Interviews

Cecilia Nyawut, an usher at a clinic in Juba applied for a new job opening at an international franchise simply because someone had told her that the potential employer, a five-star hotel that was coming to town didn’t need potential recruits to have expertise. “I reluctantly dropped...

U.S to South Sudan: Five years later, family of slain US journalist deserves closure

A credible inquiry into the death of American journalist Christopher Allen, killed at the frontlines of war between rebels and government forces in 2017 would give the family the closure the family deserves, the US. Embassy has said. Says an Embassy statement: “Today marks five years since...