Latest Briefings
View All
South Sudan Government's Policy Stagnation Fuels Another UN Sanctions Extension
Every uninvestigated atrocity, every warlord integrated into the state payroll without accountability, strengthens the hand of those in New York and other capitals who argue that sanctions must not only continue but be tightened. Washington maintains that any influx of weapons into a fractured polity where commanders have repeatedly turned arms on civilians would inevitably escalate internal strife. Juba’s envoys, tasked with making the case for relief, are left with a brief devoid of deliverables, forced to rely on appeals to sovereignty that sound increasingly hollow when the sovereign in question cannot control its own military or protect its own citizens.

Juba Retreats from Unilateral Peace Deal Amendment After Western Pressure
South Sudan's cabinet abandoned a controversial plan to weaken the legal authority of the 2018 peace agreement following severe international backlash. The reversal preserves the deal’s status as the supreme legal framework ahead of the country's planned 2026 general elections.

Kenya’s Judicial Service Commission Pushes for Data-Driven Accountability of Judges
The Kenyan Judiciary is transitioning to a transparent framework that mandates the publication of individual performance data for judges to ensure constitutional accountability. This shift requires court leadership to prioritize metrics like case clearance rates and public perception to maintain the institutional record.

SOUTH SUDAN JUDICIARY MANDATES ENGLISH FOR COURT JUDGMENTS: A DRAMATIC LEGAL PIVOT TOWARD THE EAST AFRICAN COMMUNITY
All judges in the Republic of South Sudan shall write their judgments in English with effect from 1st June, 2026, the Chief Justice declared.

Kenyan Court Deals Blow to Bank of South Sudan as Millions are Seized for State Debt
In a dramatic ruling that underscores the vulnerability of sovereign assets, the Kenyan Court of Appeal has paved the way for a landmark legal battle over central bank independence—even as it admitted the specific funds at the heart of the dispute have already vanished.

The South Sudan Blood Oil Trial in Sweden Nears Its Judgment
After a historic three-year legal battle, corporate executives face a definitive reckoning over their alleged complicity in a brutal resource war. Stockholm prosecutors have concluded their closing arguments, seeking multi-year prison sentences for two former Lundin Oil executives accused of aiding and abetting war crimes in Sudan between 1999 and 2003, before South Sudan’s independence.

South Sudan’s Defiance of the ACHPR Ruling Illegally Profits Terab Radio 87.6 FM
In its latest ruling, the African Commission condemned South Sudan for state-sanctioned land grabs, but Juba had already turned the illegally seized site into government-backed radio 87.6 Terab FM, hosting ministers and laundering the violation into a private asset for Mading Ngor Akec.

ACHPR Ruling on South Sudan Nationality Case Sets New Precedent for African Citizenship Rights
The African Commission ruled South Sudan’s arbitrary stripping of a high-level official’s nationality—leaving her stateless—violated the African Charter’s dignity clause, and setting a new precedent for citizenship rights in Africa.

AU Peace and Security Council Reiterates Call for the Release of First Vice President Riek Machar
Following its 1343rd meeting held on April 30, 2026, AU Peace and Security Council Calls for the Release of First Vice President Riek Machar from Detention in Juba.
Opinions.
View All
Selecting the "Correct" Opposition: The Decree that Ate the Legislature
The presidential revocation of 47 SPLM-IO Members of Parliament marks a definitive crisis for the 2018 Revitalised Peace Agreement. By asserting executive authority to reshape the opposition’s legislative wing, President Salva Kiir has not merely engaged in a personnel shuffle; he has challenged the foundational principles of power-sharing and collegial collaboration. In doing so, the Presidency has exposed a dangerous gap between the "Supreme Law" of the land and the political reality of rule by decree, threatening to turn the 2026 transition into an institutional dead end.
By The Index Post - Staff
The Ghost Ledger: How South Sudan has Entered a State of Total Fiscal Suspension
South Sudan has transitioned from a state of procedural delay to one of total fiscal suspension, attempting to authorize a 2025-2026 budget for a year that has functionally elapsed while ignoring the looming 2026-2027 statutory deadline. The executive branch has replaced formal financial oversight with a series of summary removals, resulting in the rapid displacement of ten Finance Ministers in recent years and the displacement of the head of the legislature. This institutional decay leaves the national treasury operating in a legal vacuum where public expenditure proceeds without the mandate of an active Appropriation Act.
By The Index Post
Toxic Defiance: How South Sudan Is Ignoring the Law and Poisoning its Future
The Republic of South Sudan remains in breach of a landmark mediated settlement to remediate catastrophic oil pollution in its northern wetlands. Despite a 2021 East African Court of Justice decree, the government’s failure to properly audit toxic spills has sparked a new legal crisis over regional treaty compliance.
By The Index PostIn-Depth Analysis
View All
HOW SOUTH SUDAN'S CONSTANT CONTRACT BREACHES GIVE RISE TO $2B PLUS INDEFENSIBLE LEGAL BATTLE
The Republic of South Sudan is drowning in over $2.3 billion of international litigation sparked by a systemic culture of contractual bad faith and administrative paralysis. Despite progressive investment laws on the books, Juba’s habit of ignoring signed settlements and arbitrarily seizing assets has transformed the nation into a primary "no-go" zone for global capital.
By The Index Post
The Blue House in Court: South Sudan’s Widely Condemned National Security Law Faces EACJ Reckoning
The East African Court of Justice is weighing a pivotal challenge to South Sudan’s National Security Service Amendment Act, which preserves warrantless arrest powers despite constitutional safeguards—a key test (Reference No. 43 of 2024) of regional judicial supremacy over domestic repression laws.
By The Index Post
