
Years of civil war and economic crisis have left young people in South Sudan with a legacy of violence and poverty – and with opportunities scarce, street gangs have flourished. RFI met one former gang member who believes football can offer marginalised youth a brighter future.
On a dusty field in Sherikat, a suburb in the south-east of South Sudan's capital Juba, children and teenagers practice dribbling balls and weaving between cones. They take turns playing against each other, different coloured jerseys dividing them into teams.
"This is Young Dream Football Academy," says Alaak Akuei, who everyone calls Kuku. "We are working with young people. Most of them come from the street and some are in gangs."
Akuei, 24, used to belong to a gang himself. He joined when he was 13 and newly arrived in Juba from a smaller town in the south.
Five years later, after several stints in prison, he set up Young Dream.
"The young men, they don't have anything to do. That's why many of them are on the streets and end up in gangs," he says. "We need to offer them activities to keep them busy and so that they don't drop out of school. Football can be very powerful to fight this issue of gangs."
'Sense of belonging'
Gang crime has become a major concern in Juba and other cities in South Sudan. In one internal displacement camp in the capital alone, the NGO Nonviolent Peaceforce estimates that nearly 1,200 people belonged to gangs in 2021, more than 90 percent of them aged under 18.
Members were accused of crimes including theft, drug dealing, rape and assault.
While many victims are members of rival gangs, outside "civilians" can be caught up too: between 2018 and 2023, the charity says, gang violence reportedly killed 39 people in the camp – 11 of them non-members – and severely injured more than 600.
Years of insecurity in the country have killed or displaced millions, breaking up communities and disrupting schooling and livelihoods.
Now, the peace deal that ended the 2013-18 civil war looks close to collapse, threatening to tip the country back into conflict.
Meanwhile, widespread corruption and power struggles between political factions have left much of the country struggling to secure food, healthcare, education and other basic services, according to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan.
In the absence of the state, gangs have stepped in. They offer not only a path to profits, but a community.
"Children and youth are looking for a sense of belonging, to be loved. That is the main reason why they join gangs," believes Sakaya Peter, who works for community empowerment NGO Gredo.
"In these groups, they don't just fight or steal. They love each other deeply and care for one another."
For the same reason, he says, initiatives such as the football academy can offer an effective alternative.
"By bringing them together regularly to do sports, we can offer them that same feeling that they have people they can get support from."
South Sudan's returnee farmers yearn for peace to revive food production
Second chances
Today Young Dream trains more than 900 young footballers, as well as running other sports programmes, academic support sessions and leadership workshops.
Its six coaches are all former gang members. Emmanuel Aman Malual, 21, sees it as a second chance.
"Back when we were in the gang, we slept on the streets, drank, smoked. We did a lot of bad things. But it is possible to change," he says. "I am a different person now, and I can't imagine going back. Now all I want is to help these children, because they are the future of this nation."
By the side of the pitch, a group of boys stand in the shade of a tin veranda. They were recruited from the streets by Akuei, who is also trying to get them back in touch with their families.
John, 17, left home in 2017. His mother, an alcoholic, could be violent. His ambitions are simple: "I want to play football and go to school, and stay in a nice place where I can sleep, change my clothes and live normally."
This article was adapted from the original version in French by RFI's Florence Miettaux.
Newer articles:
- South Sudan’s first homegrown ride-hailing startup finds ways to survive its tough market - 27/10/2025 14:54
- South Sudan’s Army Chief Orders Immediate Closure of Illegal Checkpoints Following Security Clash - 27/10/2025 14:46
- South Sudan: Flooding Situation Flash Update No. 8 (As of 24 October 2025) - 27/10/2025 14:40
- South Sudan: The Internal Turmoil - 21/10/2025 16:47
- Comprehensive treatment for serious mental health conditions is possible in South Sudan - 21/10/2025 16:40
Older news items
- The Cost of Faith in Sudan - 21/10/2025 16:29
- Prosecution of South Sudan’s vice-president raises fears of return to full-scale civil war - 14/10/2025 13:22
- Political crisis and corruption fuelling violence in South Sudan, UN rights body says - 14/10/2025 13:16
- UN commission calls upon international bodies to address deepening crisis in South Sudan - 14/10/2025 13:08
- South Sudan flood crisis deepens: Nearly 890,000 affected as humanitarian needs soar - 14/10/2025 12:59
Latest news items (all categories):
- Vietnamese man deported from U.S. to South Sudan is repatriated after months in detention - 19/06/2026 17:11
- South Sudan Holds Joint Ministerial Meeting on EAC Infrastructure and ICT Projects - 19/06/2026 17:08
- Japan extends Self-Defense Forces deployment in South Sudan - 19/06/2026 17:04
- Research ● Belarus between Hormuz and Zangezur: new geopolitical horizons of Eurasian security and logistics - 17/06/2026 14:06
- South Sudan is Looking Beyond Oil. The Risks are Familiar - 17/06/2026 13:50
See also (all categories):
Random articles (all categories):
- The stone age government of Hon Atem Atem is a curse to the people of Gogrial state - 22/06/2019 18:27
- دور النفط في تأجيج الخلافات في منطقة أبيي - 17/02/2009 18:30
- South Sudan orders resumption of oil production - BBC News - 18/10/2012 17:20
- UN experts warn of mass violence against civilians in South Sudan - 26/01/2026 12:03
- South Sudan student’s kin bury her in Mumbai, ask for footage of railway accident - 18/07/2018 17:37
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 146496 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27524 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24685 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 24018 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21896 times