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07/05/2024

Portrait of shame as SSD diplomat roamed the street of Italy after he was evicted by the owner of property

Date: 07/05/2024
To: HQs, Juba
Re: South Sudan top Diplomat’s homelessness in Rome, Italy
1. May 6, 2024 , a top South Sudan’s Diplomat serving at the Embassy in Rome, Italy, MP G*i Lel Ngundeng was evicted from the rented apartment due to non-payment of rent for six (06) months to the land lady
2. The landlady went through the court procedures and ejected MP Ngundeng from the apartment as a result the top diplomat became homeless and slept on the streets of slum of Roma Termini with homeless refugees. The fate of the diplomats’ status is not yet known as he continues to live on the streets of Rome, Italy
3. Most of the diplomats apartments are being closed down in Italy by the property owners due to defaulted payments
4. South Sudan Head of Mission in Rome, Italy refused MP Mr. Ngundeng to live with him at the Residence of South Sudan Embassy. Equally, other diplomats are not allowed to move to the South Sudan residence
5. This is a very embarrassing situation to the image and reputation of the Republic of South Sudan. There is need for immediate intervention from the top leadership of the Republic of South Sudan
6. The public and judicial officers communicated the extension of eviction order immediately for South Sudan Embassy from 07.05.2024 to 18. 06.2024 free of equipment and people
7. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International cooperation in Juba, South Sudan should pay salaries and rent arrears promptly
8. This is for your information and actions
9. Regards

Rome, Italy

President Paul Kagame Speech During the 30th anniversary of Genocide. Today, our hearts are filled with grief and gratit...
08/04/2024

President Paul Kagame Speech During the 30th anniversary of Genocide.

Today, our hearts are filled with grief and gratitude in equal measure. We remember our dead, and are also grateful for what Rwanda has become.

To the survivors among us, we are in your debt.

We asked you to do the impossible by carrying the burden of reconciliation on your shoulders. And you continue to do the impossible for our nation, every single day, and we thank you.

As the years pass, the descendants of survivors increasingly struggle with the quiet loneliness of longing for relatives they never met, or never even got the chance to be born.

Today, we are thinking of you as well. Our tears flow inward, but we carry on, as a family.

Countless Rwandans also resisted the call to genocide. Some paid the ultimate price for that courage, and we honour their memory.

Our journey has been long and tough. Rwanda was completely humbled by the magnitude of our loss, and the lessons we learned are engraved in blood.

But the tremendous progress of our country is plain to see, and it is the result of the choices we made together to resurrect our nation.

The foundation of everything is unity.

That was the first choice: to believe in the idea of a reunited Rwanda, and live accordingly.

The second choice was to reverse the arrow of accountability, which used to point outwards, beyond our borders.

Now, we are accountable to each other, above all.

Most importantly, we chose to think beyond the horizon of tragedy, and become a people with a future.

Today, we also feel a particular gratitude to all the friends and representatives here with us from around the world. We are deeply honoured by your presence alongside us on this very heavy day. The contributions you have made to Rwanda’s rebirth are enormous, and have helped us to stand where we are now.

I want to recognize a few, while also asking for forgiveness for not being able to mention all who deserve it.

For example, Uganda, which carried the burden of Rwanda’s internal problems for so many years, and was even blamed for that.

The leadership and the people of Ethiopia and Eritrea helped us in starting to rebuild at that time. In fact, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed,who is here, even served as a young peacekeeper in the immediate aftermath of the genocide.

Kenya, Burundi, and the Democratic Republic of Congo hosted large numbers of Rwandan refugees, and gave them a home.

Tanzania did as well, and also played a unique role at many critical points, including hosting and facilitating the Arusha peace process. And here I must single out the late President Julius Nyerere who embodied the spirit which laid that foundation.

The Republic of Congo has been a productive partner in rebuilding, and more.

Many of the countries represented here today also sent their sons and daughters to serve as peacekeepers in Rwanda. Those soldiers did not fail Rwanda; it was the international community which failed all of us, whether from contempt or cowardice.

Among those here with us today, I salute the widow and daughter of the late Captain Mbaye Diagne of Senegal, who died a hero as he rescued many Rwandans from death.

At the United Nations Security Council in 1994, moral clarity came from Nigeria, the Czech Republic, and even as far away as New Zealand.

Their ambassadors had the courage to call the genocide by its rightful name, and resist political pressure from more powerful countries to hide the truth. Ambassador Ibrahim Gambari of Nigeria and Czech Ambassador Karel Kovanda are here with us today, and we applaud you.

Even in countries where government policy was on the wrong side of history, both during the genocide and even afterwards, there were always individuals who stood out for their honesty and humanity. We shall always be grateful.

We also appreciate the tangible support we have received from partners beyond our continent over the past thirty years, in Europe, the United States, Asia, and many international organizations and philanthropies.

A notable example of solidarity came to us from South Africa, one among many. Indeed, the entire arc of our continent’s hopes and agonies could be seen in those few months of 1994. As South Africa ended apartheid and elected Nelson Mandela president, in Rwanda the last genocide of the 20th century was being carried out.

The new South Africa paid for Cuban doctors to help rebuild our shattered health system, and opened up its universities to Rwandan students, paying only local fees.

Among the hundreds of students who benefitted from South Africa’s generosity, some were orphaned survivors; others were the children of perpetrators; and many were neither.

Most have gone on to become leaders in our country in different fields.

Today, they live a completely new life.

What lessons have really been learned about the nature of genocide, and the value of life?

I want to share a personal story which I usually keep to myself.

My cousin, in fact a sister, Florence, worked for the United Nations Development Programme in Rwanda for more than fifteen years. After the genocide started, she was trapped in her house near the Camp Kigali army barracks, with her niece, and other children and neighbours, around a dozen people in total.

The telephone in Florence’s house still worked, and I called her several times using my satellite phone. Each time we spoke, she was more desperate. But our forces could not reach the area.

When the commander of the U.N. peacekeeping mission, General Dallaire, visited me where I was in Mulindi, I asked him to rescue Florence. He said he would try.

The last time I talked to her, I asked her if anyone had come. She said no, and started crying. Then she said, “Paul, you should stop trying to save us. We don’t want to live anymore anyway.” And she hung up.

At that time, I had a very strong heart. But it weakened a bit, because I understood what she was trying to tell me.

On the morning of May 16th, following a month of torture, they were all killed, except for one niece, who managed to escape, thanks to a good neighbour.

It later emerged that a Rwandan working at the UNDP betrayed his Tutsi colleagues to the killers. Witnesses remember him celebrating Florence’s murder the night after the attack. He continued his career with the United Nations for many years, even after evidence implicating him emerged. He is still a free man, now living in France.

I asked General Dallaire what had happened. He said that his soldiers encountered a militia roadblock near the house, and so they turned back, just like that.

Meanwhile, he conveyed to me an order from the United States ambassador to protect diplomats and foreign civilians evacuating by road to Burundi from attack by the militias. These two things happened at the same time. I did not need to be instructed to do something that goes without saying. That’s what I was going to do.

I do not blame General Dallaire. He is a good man who did the best that could be done in the worst conditions imaginable, and who has consistently borne witness to the truth, despite the personal cost.

Nevertheless, in the contrast between the two cases, I took note of the value that is attached to different shades of life.

In 1994, all Tutsi were supposed to be completely exterminated, once and for all, because the killings that had forced me, and hundreds of thousands of others, into exile three decades before,

had not been sufficiently thorough. That is why even babies were systematically murdered, so they would not grow up to become fighters.

Rwandans will never understand why any country would remain intentionally vague about who was targeted in the genocide. I don’t understand that. Such ambiguity is, in fact, a form of denial, which is a crime in and of itself, and Rwanda will always challenge it.

The annual event was attended by Heads of State and Government, delegated officials, dignitaries, friends of Rwanda and thousands of Rwandans .
The annual event was attended by Heads of State and Government, delegated officials, dignitaries, friends of Rwanda and thousands of Rwandans .
When the genocidal forces fled to Zaire, now called the Democratic Republic of Congo, in July 1994, with the support of their external backers, they vowed to reorganize and return to complete the genocide.

They conducted hundreds of cross-border terrorist attacks inside Rwanda over the next five years, targeting not only survivors, but also other Rwandans who had refused to go into exile, claiming thousands more lives.

The remnants of those forces are still in eastern Congo today, where they enjoy state support, in full view of the United Nations peacekeepers. Their objectives have not changed, and the only reason this group, today known as FDLR, has not been disbanded, is because their continued existence serves some unspoken interest.

As a result, hundreds of thousands of Congolese Tutsi refugees live here in our country in Rwanda, and beyond, completely forgotten, with no program of action for their safe return.

Have we really learned any lessons?

We see too many actors, even some from Africa, getting directly involved as tribal politics is given renewed prominence, and ethnic cleansing is prepared and practiced.

What has happened to us? Is this the Africa we want to live in? Is this the kind of world we want?

Rwanda’s tragedy is a warning. The process of division and extremism which leads to genocide can happen anywhere, if left unchecked.

Throughout history, survivors of mass atrocities are always expected to be quiet, to censor themselves, or else be erased and even blamed for their own misfortune. Their testimony is living evidence of complicity, and it unsettles the fictions which comfort the enablers and the bystanders.

The more Rwanda takes full responsibility for its own safety and dignity, the more intensely the established truth about the genocide is questioned and revised.

Over time, in the media controlled by the powerful in this world, victims are rebranded as villains, and even this very moment of commemoration is derided as a mere political tactic.

It is not. It never has been.

Our reaction to such hypocrisy is pure disgust.

We commemorate because those lives mattered to us.

Rwandans cannot afford to be indifferent to the root causes of genocide. We will always pay maximum attention, even if we are alone. But what we are seeking is solidarity and partnership to recognize and confront these threats together, as a global community.

I will tell you another story.

One night, in the latter days of the genocide, I received a surprise visit past midnight from General Dallaire. He brought a written message, of which I still have a copy, from the French general commanding the force that France had just deployed in the western part of our country, Operation Turquoise.

The message said that we would pay a heavy price if our forces dared to try to capture the town of Butare, in the southern part of our country.

The New Times
General Dallaire gave me some additional advice, in fact he warned me that the French had attack helicopters, and every kind of heavy weapon you can imagine, and therefore were prepared to use them against us if we did not comply.

I asked Dallaire whether French soldiers bleed the same way ours do; whether we have blood in our bodies.

Then I thanked him, and told him he should just go and get some rest and sleep, after informing the French that our response would follow.

And it did.

I immediately radioed the commander of the forces we had in that area, he is called Fred Ibingira, and told him to get ready to move. And move to fight.

We took Butare at dawn.

Within weeks, the entire country had been secured, and we began rebuilding. We did not have the kind of arms that were being used to threaten us, but I reminded some people that this is our land, this is our country. Those who bleed will bleed on it.

We had lost all fear. Each challenge or indignity just made us stronger.

After the genocide, we faced the puzzle of how to prevent it from recurring. There were three broad lessons we learned as result of our experiences.

First, only we as Rwandans and Africans can give full value to our lives. After all, we cannot ask others to value African lives more highly than we ourselves do. That is the root of our duty to preserve memory and tell our history as we lived it.

Second, never wait for rescue, or ask for permission to do what is right to protect people. That is why some people must be joking when they threaten us with all kinds of things, they don’t know what they are talking about. In any case, that is why Rwanda participates proudly in peacekeeping operations today, and also extends assistance to African brothers and sisters bilaterally when asked.

Third, stand firm against the politics of ethnic populism in any form. Genocide is populism in its purified form. Because the causes are political, the remedies must be as well. For that reason, our politics is not organized on the basis of ethnicity or religion, and it never will be again.

The life of my generation has been a recurring cycle of genocidal violence in thirty year intervals, from the early 1960s, to 1994, to the signs we see in our region today in 2024.

Only a new generation of young people has the ability to renew and redeem a nation after a genocide. Our job was to provide the space and the tools for them to break the cycle.

And they have.

What gives us hope and confidence are the children we saw in the performance earlier, or the youth who created the tradition of Walk to Remember that will occur later today.

Nearly three-quarters of Rwandans today are under age 35. They either have no memory of the genocide, or were not yet born.

Our youth are the guardians of our future and the foundation of our unity, with a mindset that is totally different from the generation before.

Today, it is all Rwandans who have conquered fear. Nothing can be worse than what we have already experienced. This is a nation of 14 million people, who are ready to confront any attempt to take us backwards.

The Rwandan story shows how much power human beings have within them. Whatever power you do have, you might as well use it to tell the truth and do what is right.

During the genocide, people were sometimes given the option of paying for a less painful death. There is another story I learned about at the time, which always sticks in my mind, about a woman at a roadblock, in her final moments.

She left us a lesson that every African should live by.

When asked by the killers how she wanted to die, she looked them in the eye, and spit in their face.

Today, because of the accident of survival, our only choice is what life we want to live.

Our people will never — and I mean never — be left for dead again. I thank you.

Sunday, April 07, 2024

Breaking newsDubai Police Arrests 494 Individuals Involved in Phone Fraud Targeting Bank CustomersAs Dubai Police, repre...
08/04/2024

Breaking news

Dubai Police Arrests 494 Individuals Involved in Phone Fraud Targeting Bank Customers

As Dubai Police, represented by the General Department of Criminal Investigation, arrested 494 individuals involved in 406 phone fraud cases targeting bank customers under the guise of "updating banking information" over the past year.

The fraudsters utilised various deceptive methods, including phone calls, emails, SMS, and social media links, to trick victims and access their savings and bank accounts. Dubai Police seized significant amounts of money, mobile phones, laptops, and SIM cards used to execute these scams.

The Dubai Police reiterated that fraud is a criminal offence, punishable under the Federal Law by Decree No. (31) of 2021 Promulgating the Crimes and Penalties Law and the Federal Decree-Law No. 34 of 2021 On Countering Rumours and Cybercrimes, ensuring strict offender penalties.

Advisory on Protecting Personal Banking Information

Brigadier Harib Al Shamsi, Acting Director of the General Department for Criminal Investigation at Dubai Police, urges the community to guard against revealing banking details or credit card information to anyone purporting to be from a financial institution. He highlighted the scammers' tactics of falsely claiming that the victims' accounts or cards were blocked or frozen to defraud them, emphasising the critical importance of ignoring such fraudulent communications.

He further clarified that banks never solicit banking information updates via telephone. "Customers are advised to update their details directly through the banks' branches, official customer service representatives, or authenticated banking applications."

He further urged victims of such scams to promptly report incidents to the authorities through Dubai Police's various platforms, including the Police Eye feature on the Dubai Police App, the eCrime platform, the Smart Police Station (SPS), or by calling the 901 contact centre.

Efficient Response to Fraud Alerts

Colonel Dr Khalid Aref Al Sheikh, Director of the Anti-Economic Crimes Department, highlighted the department's efficiency in addressing numerous fraud alerts related to phone scams targeting bank accounts last year.

He confirmed, "The dedicated efforts of our officers and specialists have led to the apprehension of perpetrators, demonstrating Dubai Police's commitment to legal action against such crimes."

Al Sheikh assures that the Dubai Police remains vigilant and prepared to respond to any fraud reports, underscoring the substantial investment in developing a skilled national workforce capable of providing round-the-clock support to the community, with the overarching goal of ensuring public safety and security.

04/04/2024

In J1 we see song after song collaboration after collaboration from John Frog but we only see beefing from Silver X what is going on Silve ?

04/04/2024

🚨BREAKING NEWS

Bank of South Sudan to Introduce New Banknotes to Combat Inflation and Ease Burden of Carrying Cash

In a bid to tackle rising inflation and alleviate the burden of carrying large amounts of cash, the Bank of South Sudan has announced plans to introduce new banknotes denominations of 5000 South Sudanese Pounds (ssp), 10000ssp, and 50000ssp.

The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning has highlighted the numerous advantages of introducing larger denomination banknotes, emphasizing that it will help in combating inflation and make transactions more convenient for the citizens. Additionally, the move is expected to reduce the weight of carrying large sums of money in bags, making it easier for individuals to conduct daily transactions.

In a significant development, President Kiir, in his address to the Parliament, has given the Bank of South Sudan the green light to proceed with the introduction of the new banknotes. The decision comes as part of the government's efforts to improve the economy and enhance financial stability in the country.

Experts believe that having larger denomination banknotes in circulation can benefit a struggling economy by reducing transaction costs, promoting financial inclusion, and improving efficiency in the financial system. The move is seen as a proactive step towards addressing economic challenges and fostering growth in South Sudan.

Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

03/04/2024

Best & favourite quotes of all times from Hon. Minister Michael Makuei Lueth...

You can add yours to the following as well as chose the best quote.....

1. As the only thing i can say, this is the situation we are in......Peace is around the corner......

2. There is no middle way. You must either be a good or a bad boy.

3. A white rebel was killed in frontline in Morobo.

4. G10 is not a political party & for those who might wish to join must first be arrested to qualify full members.

5. We can smartly deal with rebels in Government, but how do you deal with them in the churches?

6. There are no tear gas or rubber bullets, but we only have live bullets

7. Yes, South Sudan is one of the corrupt countries because corruption is all over the world, and South Sudan is part of the world

8. Whether you like it or not government must take the lead

9. “Women rapped by men in uniform doesn’t mean government soldiers” There are SPLA-IO in uniforms as well ad UNMISS in uniform too.

10. The system is corrupt due to weak institutions.

11. There are some trees in the bushes of South Sudan, you can go and hang yourself there.

12. Peace is peace whether a good or bad one.

13. The SPLA gallant forces make tactical withdrawal from point A to B.

14. If you can't handle this situation, you are free to leave South Sudan.

15. All I can say is that we are implementing the peace agreement 🤝 & moving in the right direction.

16. The current membets of Parliament are not legitimate because they are are not elected by the people.

17. As the Government, we are going for elections as provided by the revitalized peace agreement whether you like or not.

18. We need to be voted in by our people so that our people exercise their democratic rights.

19. No Agreement all over the world has been i
fully implemented even the CPA signed with Beshir regime was partially implemented as issues of Abyei, Southern Kordufan and Blue Nile are still pending upto now.

Hon. Michael Makuei Lueth

27/03/2024

An Appeal Letter to His Excellency Salva Kiir Mayardit, the President of the Republic of South Sudan.

Subject: Suspension of the Board of Trustees of the South Sudan Pensions Fund by Minister Dak Duop Bichiok.

We are saddened to be subjected to this situation violating all the laws of the land, including the Presidential Decree issued on June 21, 2021, appointing the Board of Trustees.

Hon. Dak Duop Bichiok, Minister of Public Service and Human Resource Development, issued a Ministerial Order on March 25, 2024, suspending the Board of Trustees of Pensions Fund. This suspension is violating the Presidential Decree No 107/2021.

The trigger of this suspension by Dak Duop Bichiok is because Dak Duop Bichiok ordered to Board of Trustees of the South Sudan Pensions Fund to release to him 100 Million SSP but the Board of Trustees rejected the request in their meeting. Now the Minister Dak Duop Bichiok appointed his temporary Board of Trustees to loot the funds of the Pensioners.

This behaviour of Dak Duop Bichiok, if not stopped, can create chaos in the Pensions Fund. This is the money of the people and not the money of the Ministry to be used as Dak Duop Bichiok wishes.

We, the suspended Board of Trustees of the South Sudan Pensions Fund, are appealing to the President of the Republic to intervene before it is too late.

The Board of Trustees met on March 27, 2024, and rejected his letter.

Signed March 27, 2024.

Remembering Akobo Massacres 1964 Anya-Nya Civil War, which lasted from 1955 to 1972, was a conflict between the Sudanese...
27/03/2024

Remembering Akobo Massacres 1964

Anya-Nya Civil War, which lasted from 1955 to 1972, was a conflict between the Sudanese government and the Anya-Nya rebels, who were fighting for greater autonomy and political representation in the southern region of Sudan.

This conflict primarily unfolded in the Upper Nile province, a strategically important area due to its being an oil-rich region of Sudan. The fighting mainly involved the Anya-Nya rebel fighters and the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) soldiers, but it is important to note that the civilian population suffered greatly as well. The conflict resulted in the displacement of millions of people and widespread human rights abuses, including extrajudicial killings, torture, and r**e.

One particularly gruesome incident took place on 27 March 1964, where SAF soldiers led by Abubakr al-Wagia raided the village of Arini in the Akobo District of the Upper Nile Province. The soldiers were searching for a chief suspected of collaborating with the rebels and believed he was hiding in Arini.

In an act of brutal violence, the soldiers tied the hands of over fifty unarmed Anyuak men behind their backs and systematically shot them dead. The men were innocent and had been rounded up while daubing and plastering a hut.

This incident serves as a stark reminder of the brutality of war and the toll it takes on innocent civilians. The fact that the victims were tied up and shot in cold blood is particularly chilling and underscores the dehumanizing nature of the conflict. It is also significant to note that incidents like this were not isolated occurrences during the Anya-Nya rebellion and subsequent civil wars, as similar atrocities were committed against civilians by SAF in areas such as Awajwok, Bor, and Wau.

Here are the names of some of those massacred in Arini village in Akobo District on 27 March 1964:

Chief Akodhi wor Jimjweel
Nyikwenyi Owar Didier
Omot Owar (Omotdidier)
Omot Omot Didier (Omotgak)
Anyaal Mok Owar Didier
Otho Odeel (Ajir)
Ogira Odeel
Opiew Odeel
Ochan Odeel
Odeel Oguak
Ogal Owar Agak
Ogalla Owar Agak
Alora Ojor
Lual Obono Atieng
Kwot Oboya
Nyikewo Obongo Okello
Nyinger Ochan
Oballa wor Chilew
Gilo Owar Agak
Ojuuk Janyi
Odari Olimo
Okello Omeeng
Chuat Oluc
Kwalnaam Abui
Mamour Otiedi
Kwot Otiedi
Omot wor-Ajul
Opoga Othol Owar
Janyi Atieng
Ochan Oluc
Omot Ochalla
Aman Agak
Gatkuoth Chuol
Kulang Kuei-Lual
Chief Buya Gilo (killed sometime later)
Kwot Owar Abull
Nyiken Akwai
Akway Ajany
Ochalla Medho Ogur
Kueijak Olwaa Ojaa
Doril Teny
Omot Abula Obuk
Ochalla Okodo
Omot Otho Ager
Agwa Ngori Ojwok and his son Omotbeet were the sole survivors of the massacre.

J1 the city of big cars without roads
24/03/2024

J1 the city of big cars without roads

16/03/2024

As the Government, we are going for elections as provided by the revitalized peace agreement. We need to be voted in by our people so that our people exercise their democratic rights. No agreement all over the world has been implemented fully, even CPA signed with Beshir regime was partially implemented as issues of Abyei, Southern Kordufan and Blue Nile are still pending upto now. As partners to the Revitalized Peace Agreement, we should not fear going for elections by the end of the current transitional government.

" Hon. Michael Makuei Lueth,
Minister of ICT&PS & Government Spokesperson".

16/03/2024

JUST IN:

6.7 MILLION US DOLLARS FOR FOOD SUBSIDY DISAPPEAR BETWEEN CENTRAL BANK AND PROSPERITY COMPANY, LEAVING SUPPLIERS IN DILEMMA

A group representing Darfuri traders from Konyokonyo and Jebel markets went to the Central Bank of South Sudan on Friday morning to seek quick payment. This comes days after the traders gave up their food goods to be subsidised to stem the rising market prices of food in the market.

With the assurance that the bank would recoup the expense within a week, Akoch Manhiem, the manager of Prosperity Company, and Central Bank Governor Alic Garang enticed merchants to sell their food stock at a discounted price.

The Central Bank reportedly released $7 million the day after the deal was sealed, but the traders only received $300,000 from Prosperity Company Limited, a partnership between Alic Garang, the head of the Central Bank, and one Akoc Manhiem. The company promised to settle the remaining balance within three days, but in vain.

The Darfuri merchants who made a profit from the sale of discounted goods are still waiting for payment, but Dr. James Alic Garang, governor of the Central Bank, and his business partner have downplayed the disappearance of the state funds to the tune of 6.7 million US dollars and are now trying to get another $10 million approved for food subsidies.

Akoch Manhiem and Dr. Alic Garang told the merchants they would be paying in South Sudan pounds instead of dollars, which further complicated matters. This has been a major source of concern for suppliers, as they are in dire need of hard currencies to import items.

Traders at the Konyo Konyo and Jebel markets are allegedly planning to stage protests next week.

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