REMARKS BY H.E. MAJ GEN CHARLES TAI GITUAI INTERIM CHAIRPERSON RECONSTITUTED JOINT MONITORING AND EVALUATION COMMISSION PRESENTED AT THE RJMEC JOINT NTC AND SECURITY MECHANISMS SEMINAR, 28 JANUARY 2020 JUBA, SOUTH
REMARKS BY H.E. MAJ. GEN CHARLES TAI GITUAI INTERIM CHAIRPERSON RECONSTITUTED JOINT MONITORING AND EVALUATION COMMISSION PRESENTED AT THE RJMEC JOINT NTC AND SECURITY MECHANISMS SEMINAR, JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN
Honourable Minsters;
Ambassadors and Representatives of the Diplomatic Community;
Distinguished participants of the National Transitional Committee and the Security Mechanisms;
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Good morning.
1. It is my pleasure to welcome you all to this Seminar this morning. We at RJMEC decided to organise this Seminar in accordance with our mandate chapter 7 article 7.6 where it states that inter alia ... “in case of non-implementation of the mandate and tasks of the RTGoNU, or other deficiencies, the RJMEC shall recommend appropriate corrective action to the RTGoNU.” Therefore as peace monitors and evaluators we are obligated to oversee the implementation of the Agreement within the agreed timelines and implementation schedule.
2. Consequently, RJMEC decided to conduct this one-day seminar, following our assessment and evaluation, from the beginning of the Transitional Period and up to now, we have observed that there has been a significant decline in the pace of implementation of the Permanent Ceasefire and Transitional Security Arrangements (PCTSA) as envisaged in Chapter Two of the Agreement. This being a critical Chapter in the overall success of the implementation of the Peace process, raises concerns, as its failure would no doubt threat the security situation in the country and undermine the nation's hope for enduring peace in South Sudan.
3. Permanent Ceasefire and the Transitional Security Arrangements (PCTSA) are a fundamental building block of the Revitalised Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in the Republic of South Sudan (R-ARCSS). The success of the implementation of Chapter Two will create the foundation upon which security of all other chapters will operate; and it is an assurance of a stable nation, as Unified Forces signifies the National Unity and a symbol of nationhood, where security forces are loyal to the Constitution and to the country with one Commander in Chief who is also the Head of State.
4. However, RJMEC, as monitors and evaluators of the peace process, we have clearly seen that the training of the National Unified Forces has stalled. As we witnessed for ourselves on Saturday 23 January 2021 at both Maridi and Rajaf training centres when RJMEC conducted a joint field visit with the IGAD Special Envoy for South Sudan and the head of the African Union Mission in South Sudan, the IGAD Ambassadors and C5 African Ambassadors, and also including other areas that RJMEC have visited in different occasions like Mapel and others.
5. RJMEC’s assessment has come up with three areas that are of critical concern and will be the basis of our discussion today among others. These areas are:
a) Failure of cantonment;
b) Stalling of NUF Training, graduation and redeployment; and
c) Defections/Changes of Allegiance.
6. During the previous visits to the training areas, the soldier’s expectations of graduation and deployment was very high as well as their morale, as they foresaw a new dawn in their military careers. Now there are reports of morale reaching low levels in the poorly supplied Cantonment sites, and reports of trainees abandoning poorly supplied training centres in search of food. To date no graduation or redeployment plans have been published. Problems of diseases and lack of medicine and many other problems which no doubt, we will hear more about during the course of this Seminar.
7. Other reports indicate an increase in defections / changes of allegiance amongst some commanders and their troops which undermines the unification process. RJMEC has made its position very clear on defections or changes of allegiance in many other occasions and has previously stated that “the Revitalised Peace Agreement in South Sudan has made commendable progress in the past two years since its signing and this must not be allowed to weaken because of instability caused by defections or accepting defections, which is contrary to the letter and spirit of the Agreement.”
8. The aim of this Seminar therefore, is to determine the status of the PCTSA, the current and future challenges, to set priorities and to agree on solutions and proposals to keep the Permanent Ceasefire and Transitional Security Arrangements on track. I am hopeful that there will be full participation and open contributions from everyone present and we look forward to the briefings and reports from the NTC, the Security Mechanisms and the DDR Commission to enable us to take proper stock.
9. Next month marks one year of the formation of RTGoNU, other chapters have progressed, however slowly, but chapter two seems to be the slowest yet as military we should have led the way with others to follow as our mantra! This year, in July, marks ten years of independence, it is our hope that a strong push from all of us here and South Sudan’s political leaders will go a long way to ensuring that 11 July 2021, will see a celebration of progress in the implementation of the peace agreement.
I thank you.