The Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) has suspended the membership of South Sudan after the African country failed to pay its annual contributions fee.
South Sudan’s Information Minister Michael Makuei Lueth said the suspension came after the country failed to remit the country’s annual contribution to the regional bloc of eight African nations.
“We have exactly been suspended from IGAD simply because we have not paid our dues and there are so many vacancies about 14 of them which are supposed to be our positions. We are unable to occupy them simply because we have not paid our dues for long,” Lueth told reporters after a meeting of the council of ministers chaired by President Salva Kiir on Friday.
Lueth said that Foreign Minister Mayiik Ayii Deng gave a presentation to the Cabinet requesting the payment of all the dues.
“After thorough deliberation, it was decided that the minister of foreign affairs discuss all these with the new minister of finance so that they can find a way forward in order to pay all the outstanding arrears so that the government and people of South Sudan can benefit from these positions,” he added.
Ter Manyang Gatwech, a civil society activist and executive director of the Center for Peace and Advocacy (CPA), said that the suspension of membership will have a lot of implications.
“There are a lot of implications for the suspension of South Sudan from IGAD, South Sudan will not have the leverage to influence the member states of the IGAD in terms of decision-making processing when it comes to regional issues like peace and security which are the main thematic area of focus of the IGAD,” he said.