A botched decree turned election prep into a global joke, exposing serious cracks at the top of South Sudan’s government.
Decree disaster and fallout
Decree disaster and fallout
- A presidential order named a deceased person to an elections panel.
- The mistake sparked ridicule and governance concerns nationwide.
- Cleanup came fast once the error went public.
- Two senior aides lost their jobs hours later.
- Steward Soroba Budia appeared on an official panel list.
- Budia had died five years earlier.
- His inclusion stunned political observers.
- Social media tore into the blunder.
- Budia belonged to the United Democratic Party.
- His role tied back to a 2018 peace deal.
- Signature aimed to calm post-independence conflict.
- Listing him raised basic vetting questions.
- Salva Kiir acknowledged an administrative failure.
- David Amour Major blamed weak verification.
- External submissions were cited as the source.
- Responsibility stayed deliberately vague.
- David Amour Major was removed from office.
- Valentino Dhel Maluet also got dismissed.
- Africano Mande Gedima signed the announcement.
- No reasons were officially provided.
- Polls are scheduled for December.
- Previous votes were postponed repeatedly.
- Violence keeps disrupting preparations.
- Credibility remains in doubt.
- The United Nations reported mass displacement.
- Fighting intensified in Jonglei state.
- Clashes involve groups linked to Riek Machar.
- Machar remains detained while denying serious charges.
- Kiir and Machar agreed to share power in 2018.
- The pact followed a five-year civil war.
- Trust between factions stays broken.
- Election chaos mirrors deeper dysfunction.