South Sudanese Veteran Adwok Nyaba Warns of Peace Deal Collapse as Leaders Seek to Maintain Power Indefinitely
Veteran politician Adwok Nyaba claims South Sudan's peace deal is failing as leaders cling to power and avoid accountability despite regional conflicts.
By: AXL Media
Published: Mar 7, 2026, 4:51 AM EST
Source: The information in this article was sourced from Sudans Post

The Systematic Stalling of the Revitalized Peace Pact
South Sudanese political veteran Peter Adwok Nyaba has issued a stark warning regarding the integrity of the nation’s 2018 revitalized peace agreement, asserting that the pact is being systematically undermined. In a candid interview with journalist Kafuki Jada, Nyaba claimed that the country’s leadership is intentionally avoiding the implementation of key provisions to ensure they remain in office until death. He argued that the transition toward democratic governance is viewed as a direct threat by those currently in power, who fear the legal and political consequences of their tenure. According to Nyaba, the failure to move forward is not a matter of logistical difficulty but a calculated strategy to maintain total control over the state and its vast resources.
The Impossibility of Credible National Elections
A central theme of Nyaba’s critique is the push for national elections amidst a landscape of ongoing military violence. He dismissed the feasibility of a legitimate vote, pointing out that while Juba might appear stable, active fighting continues to plague regions such as Jonglei, Western Equatoria, and Eastern Equatoria. Nyaba questioned the logic of conducting a democratic exercise in a climate where citizens are still being displaced by military factions. He insisted that attempting to hold a vote without first achieving genuine security across the entire country would only serve to exacerbate the existing instability and deepen the national crisis.
Elite Interests and the Fear of Accountability
According to Nyaba, the primary driver behind the stalled transition is a deep-seated fear of accountability among the political elite. He suggested that implementing the peace deal would inevitably lead to a redistribution of power and a potential reckoning for past mismanagement or corruption. By holding onto authority indefinitely, the leadership effectively shields itself from the democratic scrutiny that would follow a peaceful transfer of power. Nyaba emphasized that the struggle is fundamentally about the preservation of individual authority rather than the welfare of the South Sudanese people, creating a deadlock that prevents any meaningful institutional reform.
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