Professors and lecturers in South Sudan's five public universities are on strike Wednesday, because the government has not paid their back salaries for the past three months and other benefits for the past year.
South Sudan's undersecretary of higher education said his ministry is aware of the university employee demands, but the government is too broke to come up with the money.
Representatives of South Sudan's universities called a news conference Tuesday in Juba to announce the strike.
Philip Finish Apollo, spokesman for the South Sudan Public Universities Staff Association and acting president of the University of Juba Academic Staff Association, said professors and lecturers have vowed to go on strike Wednesday and stay home until the Finance Ministry settles their previous debts and delivers the new salary adjustments.
The five public universities are the University of Juba, Upper Nile University, the University of Bahr el Ghazal, Rumbek and Dr. John Garang Memorial University of Science and Technology.
What it means
Apollo said the lecturers' unpaid salaries total nearly 28 million South Sudanese pounds ($4.6 million). He said the strike will impact students.
"Teaching, of course, is going to be affected. No going in the classes, things related to doing research, supervising students — of course, these are all activities university staffs used to do and, of course, these are all going to be suspended," he said.
Unless the government responds to the university employees' demands within 24 hours, Apollo said, the strike will proceed as planned.
Professor Bol Deng, undersecretary of higher education, said his ministry has done what it can to address the demands. He said education ministry officials have forwarded their complaints to the finance ministry, which is the government entity that would make the payments.
"The Ministry of Finance has only one answer [and that] is to pay the lecturers,” he said. “When there are strikes like this, committees are formed and they sit down and discuss, then they reach a middle way, because the ministry may not afford to pay all the claims but when they sit down together, they may reach a solution."
Students react
Sworo Elly Martin, a first-year student at the Department of Rural Development at the University of Juba, said the government must address the lecturers' demands.
"I am very sorry for the message for the strike that will take place by tomorrow,” he said. “And I am urging the government sincerely to remember the lecturers, because education is a key in our life; when we are not educated, it means there is no prosperity in our nation, because if they are not paid it will be difficult for them to come and give lectures."
Nyadah Paul recently finished her studies at the College of Law at the University of Juba. She said she is not happy with her professors' decision to strike.
"It is not the good time for them to strike because of education,” she said. “Most of the people now will be left like that. Most of the people will lose hope in education, so I don't think it is a good step for the lecturers to strike."
Word of a strike comes just as students who completed their studies at the University of Juba are preparing to graduate Thursday at a ceremony to be presided over by South Sudan President Salva Kiir.
Newer articles:
- South Sudan detainees ‘on the verge of death’ - 27/05/2016 02:54
- Oil-Infrastructure Damage Cuts Output Further in South Sudan - 26/05/2016 09:42
- South Sudan Women Demand Role in Transitional Government - 25/05/2016 18:33
- The search for Ethiopia's abducted children held in South Sudan - 25/05/2016 17:50
- Sudan accuses UN official of 'false' reports on displaced - 25/05/2016 11:13
Older news items
- Feeling the Pinch: Golden Wing Airline Shuts Operations across South Sudan - 25/05/2016 07:22
- U.N. condemns killing of Slovakian nun in volatile South Sudan - 25/05/2016 07:18
- South Sudan’s South: Conflict in the Equatorias - 25/05/2016 00:51
- South Sudan Professors Threaten to Strike at Five Universities - 24/05/2016 18:10
- Rights Group: South Sudan Army Violated Civilians in Wau - 24/05/2016 10:48
Latest news items (all categories):
- South Sudan sets 22 December for country's long-delayed first-ever election - 23/06/2026 15:44
- Ambassador Enarsson Backs Campaign to End Sexual Violence in Conflict at Juba Advocacy Event - 23/06/2026 15:41
- Rampant Junior Starlets crush South Sudan to clinch CECAFA bronze - 23/06/2026 15:26
- Validating Progress Towards Closing Immunity Gaps in South Sudan - 23/06/2026 15:23
- تحديد موعد أول انتخابات في تاريخ جنوب السودان - 23/06/2026 15:14
Random articles (all categories):
- South Sudan finds new Coach for failing at 2019 AFCON qualifiers - 16/03/2019 03:43
- Canada suspends consular services in Sudan as diplomats evacuated - 24/04/2023 01:09
- South Sudan’s Forgotten Refugees Keep Fleeing as Violence Continues - 14/02/2017 06:57
- South Sudan’s Kiir reiterates his support to al-Bashir - 04/01/2019 00:50
- South Sudan President Says Nation Won't Withdraw Troops From Disputed Border ... - ABC News - 12/04/2012 13:53
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 146555 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27531 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24693 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 24026 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21905 times