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How, Who and Why of My Arbitrary Arrest in Juba
By Dr. James Okuk
“No civil servant shall be favoured or victimized because of his
or her political opinion.” {RSS Interim Constitution, 2011
article 139(l)}.
I - INTRODUCTION:
In the first place I would like to thank all those who have
expressed their solidarity with me when I was arrested, detained
and imprisoned in Juba for almost two weeks without due legal
process as enshrined in the Interim Constitution of the Republic
of South Sudan (2011). I also appreciate the views of those who
wished me bad situation of carrying my own cross and rotting in
the oppressors’ detention cells and prisons for ever.
It was a very difficult moment not worth forgettable, but thank
God and my courageous soul that I didn’t break down in those
inhumane places that I was locked in. Of course those terrible
places are known as “Factories for Manufacturing Manhood” (Masna
Elrujal in Arabic) as I read it on one of the colonial
detention cell walls still being used by the so-called
liberators ruling in South Sudan now. What a continuation of the
bad and unfortunate past! God save us from the evil of ourselves
and adoption of colonial inhumane practices in the new Republic
of South Sudan!
Reading from the comments and articles written in reaction to my
case, I couldn’t imagine that I have many supporters and lovers
in South Sudan and abroad. I deeply thank all of them from the
bottom of my good heart. Thank God that I am alive and kicking
normally now as before, though I am still a prisoner inside Juba
till further notice.
Perhaps, it is high time for me to request naturalization
to Bari community man with permanent resident in Juba. Right now
I am feeling as if I have risen from among the dead with a new
discovery of what I couldn’t have known among the living
rational animals in this human world.
With this epigrammatic preamble I have now the pleasure to tell
in brief what has happened to me regarding how I was arrested,
who did it and why it was done to me arbitrarily with a motive
of humiliation and criminal-like mistreatment in Juba.
II - WHAT HAS HAPPENED REALLY?
In the afternoon of October 21, 2011
(Five Hours after my
arrival in Juba), some men
who verbally called themselves CIDs and Security agents
came to the premise of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
International Cooperation of the Republic of South Sudan in a
hunt for diplomat called James Okuk. They first got hold of a
wrong young man who happened to be tall like me and from the
same ethnic community as myself.
When I came to ask about what is happening as I was hearing my
name being pronounced as the most wanted one, they immediately
rushed at me and one of them snatched my diplomatic passport
from my chemise pocket. They ordered me and the diplomat with
the mistaken identity to get into a private car parked at the
door of the Ministry.
I refused to get into the dark car till they show me their IDs
and Warrant of Arrest with official information to the ministry
before I could get kidnapped. Immediately pistols were out and
cocked with a strict order that I get inside the dark care or
else face the consequence of a pulled trigger. Many friends
around me advised me to comply with the militant orders to avoid
any evil news coming out from the unfortunate situation.
As the dark car and the accompanying ones drove me and my
colleague away, I could see diplomats and Ambassadors (who were
present at the scene) scared from the situation. They could not
tell what will be our fate as the circumstance of our arrest
remained mysterious and to un-unknown place where I was kept
incommunicado as my cellular phone and diplomatic passport was
confiscated by the security agents.
Two days after my lock-up in a very dirty and unhealthy
detention cell inside Juba, the Counsel-General of the
Government of South Sudan in the Ministry of Justice and an
investigator officer called me into an office to take my
statement. They
carried a file carrying a compilation of five articles
associated to the style of my writings in internet websites. One
of the articles carries a black and white photo alleged to be
mine and with cartoon drawings about police scandal in Rejaf.
The alleged sources that published these articles were
www.sudaneseonline.com, www.southsudannation.com,
www.southsudan.net and www.sudantribune.com. The article titled
“South Sudan Paradox: Joyful Independence, Sorry Leadership”
seems to be the one leading in the complaint that I have been
writing against President Salva Kiir. The investigators inquired
whether the photo is mine and whether I wrote the alleged
articles. They also asked whether I am a member of SPLM-DC and
what connection I have with Dr. Lam Akol. I was also
investigated whether I know that civil servants are supposed to
keep their mouth shut when it comes to the country and its
leaders. They also asked me whether I know that my articles are
read everywhere in the world on the internet.
I requested that I be allowed to go through those articles but
was denied to do so except looking at the titles only. Hence, I
confirmed what I saw only to be looking like some articles I
wrote in 2010 and before 9th July 2011. But I told
them that I cannot guarantee the contents of those articles till
I read them properly in a sane environment. I also asked them
about the good articles I wrote in praise of President Salva
Kiir and why some of them where not compiled for the lawsuit as
well in order to make it a fair case.
After the close of the investigators’ questions, I asked them to
tell me the charges that provoked my arrest. I also requested
from them to tell me exactly who sued me? They declined to give
me an answer except that it was not their duty to tell me about
the charges and the person who opened the case against me. They
only could tell that a Security Lt. Colonel in charge of the
Protection Unit of the President of the Republic is the one who
signed a letter carrying a heading of the Office of the
President, and requesting that I be prosecuted for the compiled
five articles allegedly associated with my style of writings.
I asked them whether I have the right to be bailed out but they
told me that the case is above them and they have nothing to do
in this regard until the judge takes my confession, and perhaps
allows me to be released if deemed necessary.
After this I was thrown back to the inhumane detention cell for
another three days before I could be taken to a judge for the
legal confession. During these days neither food nor water was
provided by those who arrested me. I slept on a bare dirty
ground without a cover. Rain beat me inside the cell at one of
nights so badly. Going to outside toilet (though it was very
dirty) at night was not allowed. The prisoner has to release
himself inside the cell.
Later after three days, two armed policemen in green uniform
together with the investigator came to take me to a court in
Juba centre. I told the judge what happened in Arabic language
as he could not speak and write in good English. He wrote down
my statement and asked me to stamp the lined paper with my
blue-inked thumb. He also declined to tell me the charges and
the name of the person who sued me. After this the policemen
brought me back to the inhumane detention cell near Juba Town
Market.
Two hours later, the detention cells’ police guard opened the
lock and told me to follow him without any question. Outside the
inhumane detention cells, I found the investigator and two armed
policemen who accompanied me to the court ready to transfer me
to the Juba Central Prison. They handed me to the Prison Police
Officers who oriented me on the situation there and how I am
going to be put together in one compound with those who were
convicted of many crimes (including juveniles and murderers),
those waiting trials, and those imprisoned for madness and
stripping themselves naked. I was strictly warned not to talk
politics to anybody inside the prison.
Then, the prison warders’ police told me to take out my socks
and shoe ties before they took me inside. I complied and got in
to become prisoner for eight days where we are locked up in the
wards at five o’clock in the evening and then locked out after
six o’clock in the morning daily. The government provide food
here but no clean drinking water.
But it was a terrible experience to eat what you are not used
to, drink water and tea whose source you never know, and be
together with naked madmen and those wearing chain for being
convicted for murder and waiting capital punishment in
guillotine for the end of their lives in this world in a very
brutal manner as it used to be in the French Revolution. It was
an interesting social life as a prisoner and with prisoners at
the same time and in the same place in Juba. The law
implementation agents have not treated me innocent till proven
guilty. I was forced to be in prisoners’ uniform like any other
criminal.
Eight days later I was called to the office of the manager
officer of the prisons who told me that I am wanted by my
investigator at police station. Two policemen were outside to
escort me. The investigator told me that the Prosecutor-General
of the Government of South Sudan has ordered that I be release
but on a strong bail, that I should never travel outside Juba,
and that failure of the person who would bail me out to bring me
to the court on the day of trial would amount to a fine of
100,000 South Sudanese pound.
A number of individuals were ready to bail me out but most of
them were rejected on a ground that they are members of SPLM-DC.
At the end a director of one of the banks in South Sudan was
accepted to bail me out after seven hours of negotiation with
the investigator. Official Police Letters concerning my travel
ban were sent to the airport and immigration office in Juba as
instructed by the Prosecutor-General.
Finally I was released at 06:00 p.m on 2nd November
2011 and went home to rest as I was suffering from serious flue,
perhaps coming from what I was inhaling when in prison. I am now
living inside Juba but not different from a prisoner who is
permitted to walk alone (dowar Brawo in Arabic) in the
city and come back to the prisons anytime when needed to appear.
III - ANALYSIS OF WHAT HAPPENED:
Though any citizen or government has a right to sue a matured
citizen for a criminal or civil charge, I think the due legal
process has not been followed in my case, and perhaps, in many
other cases. There is nothing in the civilized world called a
case from the office of the president should be treated above
the law itself. Where is the Equality of law for everyone in
South Sudan even when he is not the President? When did the
Security men who are supposed to be responsible for physical
safety of the President became legal counsels to ask for legal
suit for someone perceived to have gone critical on the
president? Is there no legal advisor of the President to take
care of such specialized matters if they are really genuine?
There is nothing in the interim constitution of the new republic
that prevent a civil servant of expression his opinion as a
citizen as long as he does not use his position in the
government to support the opinion. In my articles on internet
and some that have been published by newspapers, I have never
alluded by any chance that I write as a diplomatic
representative of the government. Where does the question of a
civil servant criticizing his president and the government
arises here? Even article 139(l) of the Interim Constitution of
South Sudan allows civil servants to express their opinions
without being discriminated nor victimized for doing so. I
quote: “no civil servant shall be favored or victimized
because of his or her political opinion.”
Not only this, but also if it becomes a cross-cutting rule that
civil servants in South Sudan are not supposed to be associated
with political parties or politicians, will not most of the
government employees be dismissed in their current positions as
a big number of them are registered members of SPLM party? Will
multi-party democracy makes sense and where will South Sudan get
enough voters and political mobilizers from?
Let those who want me to resign or have the ill motive to
dismiss me from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
International Cooperation look for a credible reason for their
action. After all they should rest assured that a highly
qualified young man like me has many avenues of employment
inside South Sudan and even abroad if pushed to a forced exile.
If some of my writings are seen to be against the former
president of the government of Southern Sudan, H.E. Gen. Salva
Kiir, I expected to have been approached for an apology as it is
commonly known in the media world. This could have been done
long time ago in 2010 or early 2011 when the articles I wrote
were still fresh to make contextual and milieu sense. Since
South Sudan became an Independent state I have never written any
article on the president or against South Sudan as it is being
propagated by those running after my sincere soul these days in
Juba. I know my borders and write on what I critically know.
If those articles went personal against Mr. Salva Kiir as a
citizen, why was it not clearly indicated even by the judge who
took my legal confession that it was Mr. Kiir who sued me for
damaging his image? If it is a police case why should the
security agents keep my cellular phone and diplomatic passport
up to now since the day of my release on bail?
IV - CONCLUSION:
I doubt whether President Salva Kiir can lower himself down to
sue a young Southerner who is a PhD holder like me and from a
different generation. President Kiir is the generation of my
father and nothing would have made me to write against his
leadership style if he were not the top boss of the government
of Southern Sudan by then.
Also my critique to his leadership was not meant for harm but
improvement as all human beings are born to make mistakes and
learn from them. I am one of the people who want to see
President Kiir a very successful leader to be recorded in South
Sudan history apart from independence achievement resulting from
the overwhelming votes of Southerners in 2011 referendum.
I am sure our dear President Kiir has benefited from my
free-of-charge articles because I also wrote positive articles
about his leadership. I am sorry if some of those articles have
hurt him as a person but until I hear this from him directly.
What has been said and done could have been put into his mouth
without his knowledge and by those who may think that doing so
will please the President to keep them in the job or reward them
with promotions. Some of those flatterers could be from my very
own Collo (Shilluk ethnic community) acting behind the scene by
using foxily someone working in a very sensitive security area
in the President’s Office.
Time will tell and the whole truth will come out sooner or
later. If I wronged the President I will be ready to rot in
prisons and let my children become street children as no one
would take good care of them as I would have done. I will also
be ready to apologize and demand amnesty and mercy from the
President’s kindness with a promise that I will stop being a
writer.
All in all, what has happened and what is still being awaited to
happen is part of the challenges of the building of the new
nation. I will consider it a sacrifice worth paying for. Genuine
calls for public reforms are said to be generated by abuse and
mess-ups of government powers. Perhaps my case would become part
and parcel of the causes that will provoke reform of the law
implementation agencies in the Republic of South Sudan. I am not
going to take it as a personal issue nor will I develop hatred
against anyone involved negatively in this case even if he is a
judge.
I love my country, South Sudan. I will remain and work for its
betterment whatsoever comes on my way. I will never get
intimidated or discouraged even if mistreated and humiliated. It
is a commitment if not a promise!
Dr. James Okuk is South Sudanese and a PhD holder from
University of Nairobi. He is now residing in Juba and could be
reached at okukjimy@hotmail.com |
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