South Sudan peace monitor steps down

The Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Committee (JMEC) chairman Mr Festus Mogae in South Sudan. PHOTO BY JOSEPH ODUHA

What you need to know:

  • In the next eight months, during the pre-trial period, the warring parties must form a Cabinet of 35 members, appoint new members of parliament, constitute the National Boundary Committee and integrate the armed groups into a single national army.

The head of Igad's Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (JMEC) for South Sudan, Mr Festus Mogae, has announced his resignation.

Mr Mogae said Monday that he has submitted his resignation letter to the Intergovernmental Authority on Development chairman Ethiopian Prime Minister Ahmed Abiy.

The former Botswana president in his quit notice said he will be stepping down to allow new leadership during South Sudan's transition phase.

"As the process of revitalise the agreement on the resolution of the conflict in the Republic of South Sudan draws to a close, I have adjudged it appropriate to allow for the new phase of the transitional period for South Sudan to be in fresh hands," he said in a statement.
He is expected to end his service at the end of September.

His resignation comes as South Sudan warring parties sealed a new peace agreement in Khartoum in talks that ended on Sunday.

The agreement compels President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar to work together again.

JMEC was established under the terms of the August 2015 South Sudan peace agreement to monitor, and oversee the implementation of the deal.

The pact however broke down after fresh fighting erupted a year later.
In the latest deal, has however made major strides compared with previous efforts to stop the five-year civil war.

In the next eight months, during the pre-trial period, the warring parties must form a Cabinet of 35 members, appoint new members of parliament, constitute the National Boundary Committee and integrate the armed groups into a single national army.