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South Sudan oil money corruptly funds civil war, say reports

AP  |  Juba(South Sudan) 

South Sudan's state-owned company has been "captured by predatory elites" and is being used to fund the country's civil war, including a government-aligned accused of human rights abuses, according reports by two investigative organisations. Millions of dollars in revenue are being funnelled from into the nation's national security service, footing the bill for the war, now in its fifth year, says Global Witness, in a report released today. More than USD 80 million was paid to South Sudanese politicians, military officials, government agencies, and companies owned by politicians and members of their families, according to The Sentry, an investigative group co-founded by The company made security-related payments from March 2014 until June 2015, according to The Sentry, which obtained a log of payments kept by the The calls the reports' findings deeply disturbing. "profits should be fuelling the development of the country and not be corruptly used to buy arms to further destroy it. South Sudan's resources should be used to benefit the people of and leaders have a duty to put the interests of their people above their own," Mark Weinberg, of the told is directly controlled by South Sudan's and his "inner circle," according to the report, based on confidential documents and firsthand testimony. Akol Koor, of the internal security bureau and a member of Nile Petroleum's board of directors, has provided the with weapons paid for by funds from the monopoly, said the report. denies funding any military activity and says the money is being used for community projects such as roads, schools and hospitals. "We can't fund militia, it's not part of our job," said Yiey Puoch Lur, the company's director. He suggested had "forged" the documents. has Africa's third-largest reserves, with an estimated 3.5 billion barrels.

Yet after five years of civil war, which has killed tens of thousands and displaced millions, the country is also in an economic crisis. Lawmakers have long accused government officials of using money for personal gain instead of helping the local population. "The money's not being kept in the country," said a member of parliament, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of his safety. Government officials are embezzling revenues into offshore accounts, he said. The United States, the and the international community should counter South Sudan's "violent kleptocracy" by investigating top officials and imposing "network-focused sanctions," urged The Sentry. J R Mailey, The Sentry's special investigations director, told AP that "cutting off top officials and their facilitators' access to banks and foreign currency is key to building the leverage needed to end the war.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, March 06 2018. 18:00 IST
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