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Will Elections Bring Peace to South Sudan?

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20 Jan 2026, 10:54 UTC
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South Sudan, the world’s youngest nation, has not had an election since its independence from Sudan in 2011. Per the 2018 power-sharing agreement, the election is set to happen this year in December 2026. Following numerous extensions, it will determine the peace process and political stability. This will be the first election South Sudanese will vote in as an independence country. The last election South Sudanese participated in was when it was part of Sudan in 2010, per the Comprehensive Peace Agreement signed in 2005. On December 22, 2025, the country’s National Elections Commission announced its readiness to conduct elections […] The post Will Elections Bring Peace to South Sudan? appeared first on African Arguments.

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South Sudanese rebel leader and now Vice President Riek Machar (centre left) walks with President Salva Kiir after being sworn in at the Presidential Palace in the Capital Juba, April 26, 2016. South Sudan, the world’s youngest nation, has not had an election since its independence from Sudan in 2011. Per the 2018 power-sharing agreement, the election is set to happen this year in December 2026. Following numerous extensions, it will determine the peace process and political stability. This will be the first election South Sudanese will vote in as an independence country. The last election South Sudanese participated in was when it was part of Sudan in 2010, per the Comprehensive Peace Agreement signed in 2005. On December 22, 2025, the country’s National Elections Commission announced its readiness to conduct elections in December 2026. The commission stated that it will utilize the 2010 constituents according to the 2008 population census. The political reality of today is not accurately represented in the 2008 population census and lacks relevance. Most of the 2010 election constituents are either affected by conflicts or flooding that devastated parts of the country. Weak opposition Since independence, South Sudan has been under the rule of the SPLM. The SPLM’s long-term power is largely attributed to weak opposition parties and concocted conflicts. Parties to the Revitalized Agreement on Resolution of the Conflict in South Sudan (R-ARCSS), including the South Sudan Opposition Alliance (SSOA), Other Political Parties (OPP), and the Political Former Detainees (PFDs), are sharply divided. Some are either bribed to join the ruling SPLM or politically corrupted with government positions. The Sudan People’s Liberation Movement in Opposition (SPLM-IO) was the only main opposition that had a major impact on the SPLM, but it has become weaker with time. In 2018, the SPLM-IO was able to reach an agreement with the SPLM to reform political, military, and economic institutions, but it did not succeed. The SPLM-IO has disintegrated into Dr Riek’s SPLM-IO, Taban’s SPLM-IO, and now probably Par Kuol’s SPLM-IO. The former generals, such as Thomas Cirilo (from Equatoria region), former army chief, Gen. Paul Malong Awan (from Barh El Ghazal region), and former SPLM Secretary General, Pagan Amum (from Upper Nile Region), formed their parties outside the country to change the Juba regime. The Tumaini Peace Initiative was launched on May 9, 2024, in Nairobi , Kenya to include all the holdout groups that have not signed the 2018 R-ARCSS. The Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) brought them under the Tumaini initiative, which also failed due to lack of political will. The United States of America ambassador to South Sudan , Michael J. Adler, used Christmas to send his message to South Sudanese leaders. He urged the country’s leadership to end the cycles of violence and foster national unity. The call is a result of ongoing insecurity, economic hardship, and fragile political transitions. New defections from the SPLM-ruling party On October 15, 2025 and December 28, 2025 respectively, former Minister of Defense and Former Minister of Foreign Affairs Nhial Deng Nhial from Warrap (home town of the President) suspended his membership from the SPLM party and formed his own party. The ex-military General (ex-Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations) and ambassador to South Africa Gen. Wilson Deng Kuoirot (from Jonglei State) launched his movement (National Uprising Movement/Army) with a military wing. He expressed his frustration with the Kiir regime and wanted it forcefully overthrown if Kirr didn’t step aside and hand over the country to a neutral leadership to organize the election. These heavyweight politicians and generals forced into exile declared their opposition abroad. They were instrumental to the first civil war of 21 years. The departure of Nhial Deng, a former Garang favourite, and General Deng Wek, both Dinka, reveals the dissatisfaction of some politicians under the Kiir regime. Pockets of conflict The ongoing reports of attacks in different parts of the country seem to signal that opposition forces are regrouping and planning to force Kiir out of power militarily. The opposition has resorted to violent means because the peace settlement cannot remove the regime in Juba. The other key players are the war entrepreneurs. They would want the status quo to remain because an election would institute the rule of law and may close the door to corruption. The opposition parties’ chance of challenging the SPLM in the election is limited due to shrinking political space in the country, which could result in violence if they are defeated at the polls. Marauding rebellion groups in the Upper Nile and Equatoria regions are overrunning towns and villages. Kiir’s only available option to neutralize the growing rebellion in the country is to release all political detainees and propose a peaceful transfer of power. The country may risk reverting to another war. In the event Kiir decides to hand over power to technocrats, the majority of opposition organizations operating inside and outside the country would likely abandon the war and prepare for elections. The political atmosphere in South Sudan is worrying and fragile. Conflicts are popping up everywhere in the country. Currently, candidates can’t crisscross the country and campaign. Mistrust among parties to the Agreement Given that mistrust among the parties to the R-ARCSS is on the rise due to divisions, the question is whether the factors that caused the previous extension have been addressed. The parties to the last extension promised South Sudan that this was the last extension, and the Revitalized Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (JMEC) echoed the same. On December 23, 2025 , the parties amended the R-ARCSS to delink the National Election Act 2012 (amendment in 2023) from the permanent constitution; however, the process wasn’t inclusive but predetermined by the SPLM and parties allied to it. On December 31, President Kiir hosted a state dinner and called on the nation to embrace peace and reject violence ahead of the election, while he was sending military helicopters to bomb the SPLM-IO areas in Jonglei State. The Troika countries (the USA, the United Kingdom, and Norway), in a statement on December 23, 2025, warned the major signatories to the agreement, particularly SPLM-IG and SPLM-IO, to end the armed attacks and decide on a way forward. The country risks going to war by not unifying forces under different parties in an agreement as it prepares for a national election. The success of the 2026 roadmap depends on the completion of the unification of the organized forces. Despites parties’ willingness to participate in the election, lack of political will, inadequate funding of the election, and lack of cohesion among the parties are still a challenge. According to the JMEC quarterly report (from July and September 2025), there have been persistent political and security violations by signatory parties. These violations and delays pose a serious threat to the country’s transition through an electoral process. Funding of the elections process The country is struggling to meet its financial obligations. For a year, the government has failed to pay salaries to civil servants and the army. Most of its embassies abroad have closed due to unpaid rental fees. To date, the government hasn’t disclosed sources of funding to conduct extensive elections. No member of the Troika countries has expressed an interest in funding the elections. This begs the question of whether a General Election can be conducted without funds. The civil population in South Sudan needs proper civic education. Civil society organizations have not yet started civic education. The country’s lack of civic education could increase the likelihood of irregularities during the election. Conclusion South Sudan is not ripe for elections when there are pockets of conflict everywhere. The country has not yet recovered from the crises of 2013 and 2018, and the possibility of post-election violence cannot be ruled out. Without reconciliation, elections on their own may even worsen the situation. The decision to delink the census from the permanent constitution-making process wasn’t inclusive of all signatories to the R-ARCSS, thus not made in good faith. The post Will Elections Bring Peace to South Sudan? appeared first on African Arguments .

AI Variants

news_brief

gpt-5.4

South Sudan’s 2026 election faces conflict, mistrust and funding doubts

Short summary: South Sudan says it is preparing for its first national election since independence, but conflict, political fragmentation, weak institutions and funding gaps raise serious doubts about whether the December 2026 vote can support peace.

Long summary: South Sudan’s National Elections Commission has said it is ready to hold elections in December 2026, which would be the country’s first vote since independence in 2011. But the planned poll faces major obstacles, including insecurity, divisions among signatories to the 2018 peace deal, limited political space, lack of civic education and uncertainty over funding. The article argues that elections alone are unlikely to bring peace unless conflict is reduced, trust is rebuilt and key transition measures such as security force unification are completed.

South Sudan is scheduled to hold elections in December 2026 under the 2018 power-sharing agreement, marking its first election as an independent state. The National Elections Commission announced its readiness in late 2025, but concerns remain over its plan to rely on 2010 constituencies based on the 2008 census, which critics say no longer reflects the country’s political and demographic realities after years of conflict and flooding.

The ruling SPLM continues to dominate politics, while opposition groups remain divided and weakened. The SPLM-IO, once the main challenger, has fragmented, and other opposition factions have struggled to build a united front. New defections from senior figures formerly aligned with President Salva Kiir have added to signs of discontent within the political establishment.

At the same time, armed violence persists in several regions, raising fears that some actors may try to pursue change through force rather than elections. Mistrust among parties to the peace agreement remains high, and progress on key commitments, including the unification of forces, has been limited.

The election process also faces severe financial constraints. The government has struggled to pay salaries and has not publicly detailed how it will fund a nationwide vote. Civic education efforts have yet to take off, increasing the risk of confusion and irregularities. The overall assessment is that, without reconciliation, security improvements and broader political inclusion, the 2026 election could deepen instability rather than secure peace.

Tags: South Sudan, 2026 election, Salva Kiir, Riek Machar, SPLM, SPLM-IO, peace process, political stability, conflict, election funding

Hashtags: #SouthSudan, #Elections2026, #PeaceProcess, #EastAfrica, #PoliticalStability

social

gpt-5.4

South Sudan’s first post-independence election is planned for 2026, but peace is far from guaranteed

Short summary: A December 2026 vote would be historic for South Sudan, yet ongoing conflict, elite splits, weak opposition coordination and funding problems are fueling doubts about a peaceful election.

Long summary: South Sudan is preparing for a landmark election in December 2026, its first since independence in 2011. But the path to the polls is fragile. Violence persists in several regions, trust among parties to the peace deal is eroding, and the opposition remains fragmented. Questions also hang over outdated constituency boundaries, civic education and how the government would pay for a national election. The central warning is clear: without reconciliation, security reform and broader political consensus, voting may not be enough to secure peace.

South Sudan says it is ready to hold elections in December 2026, a vote that would be the country’s first since independence. But major warning signs remain.

Why it matters:
- The election is tied to the 2018 peace deal and is supposed to shape the next phase of the transition.
- Ongoing clashes and rebel activity are raising fears of renewed war.
- Opposition groups are fragmented, while mistrust between major political actors remains high.
- The election framework relies on old constituency data that may not reflect current realities.
- The government has not clearly explained how it will fund the process.

Big picture: A ballot alone may not bring stability. Without reconciliation, inclusive politics, civic education and progress on security arrangements, the 2026 election could intensify tensions instead of resolving them.

Tags: South Sudan election, peace and security, Salva Kiir, Riek Machar, SPLM politics, armed conflict, democratic transition, election funding, security sector reform, East Africa politics

Hashtags: #SouthSudan, #ElectionWatch, #PeaceAndSecurity, #AfricaPolitics, #Democracy

web

gpt-5.4

Can South Sudan’s 2026 election deliver peace?

Short summary: South Sudan is preparing for its first election since independence, but insecurity, fractured opposition, mistrust among peace partners and unclear funding cast doubt on whether the vote can stabilize the country.

Long summary: South Sudan is aiming to hold a landmark election in December 2026, the first since becoming independent in 2011. The plan is central to the country’s fragile transition under the 2018 peace agreement, yet major barriers remain. The political opposition is fragmented, conflict continues in multiple regions, and implementation of key peace provisions has lagged. Concerns also surround the use of outdated constituency boundaries, the lack of civic education and the government’s failure to explain how the election will be financed. Analysts warn that without reconciliation and meaningful political reforms, the vote may not produce peace and could instead trigger further instability.

South Sudan’s planned general election in December 2026 is being framed as a decisive test of the country’s peace process and political future. If it goes ahead, it will be the first time South Sudanese vote in a national election as citizens of an independent country, after years of war, delayed transitions and repeated extensions of the peace roadmap.

The National Elections Commission announced on December 22, 2025 that it was ready to organize the vote. But that announcement did little to resolve fundamental concerns. The commission said it would use 2010 constituencies based on the 2008 census, a framework many see as outdated after years of displacement, conflict and flooding that have reshaped communities across the country.

Politically, the ruling SPLM still holds the advantage. Opposition parties remain weak, divided or co-opted, while the SPLM-IO, once the most significant rival force, has splintered into multiple factions. Former senior officials and military figures have also broken with the ruling establishment and launched new political or armed movements from exile, signaling deeper fractures within South Sudan’s elite politics.

Security conditions remain one of the biggest obstacles to a credible election. Fighting and attacks continue in parts of the country, especially in Upper Nile and Equatoria, while mistrust among the parties to the 2018 peace agreement is still growing. Key reforms have not been fully implemented, including the unification of forces, which is widely seen as essential to preventing renewed war during the transition.

There are also questions about whether the election can even be financed. The government has struggled to pay civil servants and soldiers, and it has not clearly identified how it would fund a nationwide poll. Foreign partners have not signaled support for underwriting the process. At the same time, civic education has not been adequately rolled out, raising the risk of irregularities and confusion among voters.

The broader concern is that elections alone cannot resolve South Sudan’s underlying crises. The country is still dealing with the legacy of the 2013 and 2018 conflicts, and political inclusion remains contested. Without reconciliation, trust-building and meaningful implementation of the peace deal, the 2026 election may fall short of delivering stability and could instead heighten the risk of post-election violence.

Tags: South Sudan politics, December 2026 election, peace agreement, R-ARCSS, National Elections Commission, security reform, opposition fragmentation, civic education, election readiness, post-election violence

Hashtags: #SouthSudan, #PeaceProcess, #Elections, #EastAfrica, #ConflictPrevention

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