Children run to a food drop-off point in Leer, South Sudan. War-torn South Sudan has banned the employment of all foreign workers, including those with non-governmental organisations, and ordered they be replaced by locals.
War-torn South Sudan has banned all foreign workers — including aid workers — and ordered they be replaced by locals, an official notice said on Tuesday.
"All
non-governmental organisations, private companies, banks, insurance
companies, telecommunication companies, petroleum companies, hotels and
lodges working in South Sudan are directed to notify all the aliens
working with them in all the positions to cease working as from 15th
October," said a government statement, published in several newspapers.
The order said the organisations and companies should advertise the positions — ranging from receptionists to executive directors — so that they can be filled by "competent South Sudanese nationals".
The
impending expulsion of foreign workers comes despite warnings that the
country, gripped by civil war for the past nine months, is on the brink
of famine.
South Sudan is also
heavily dependent on a network of international aid groups for
humanitarian assistance for 1.3 million people who have been internally
displaced by the conflict.
The
international NGO Global Witness, which campaigns to prevent natural
resource-related conflict and corruption, said the order was
"disturbing".
'GRAVE HUMANITARIAN CRISIS'
"It
is disturbing that the South Sudanese government is attempting to expel
trained aid workers at a time of a grave humanitarian crisis," the
group said.
"The decision
demonstrates a total disregard for the lives of the 1.3 million citizens
displaced by this oil-fuelled conflict," it said, adding that the
government "risks crippling the economy".
South
Sudan suffers from a major shortage of skilled workers, with only
around a quarter of the population being able to read and write.
Fighting
broke out in the oil-rich country, the world's youngest nation, in
December 2013 following a clash between troops loyal to President Salva
Kiir and his former deputy, Riek Machar.
The war spread rapidly across the country and has been marked by widespread human rights abuses and atrocities by both sides.
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