South Sudan’s former military chief said he has formed an organisation to challenge President Salva Kiir, accusing him of looting the country’s resources and turning it into a failed state.
Since November 2017 he has been in exile in Kenya where he was allowed to travel after months of tension between him and his guards and Kiir’s government.
Malong said in a statement that his new organisation called South Sudan-United Front was “a struggle to … arrest the carnage” and steer the nation back to democracy.
South Sudan plunged into a civil war in 2013 after a political disagreement between Kiir and his former deputy, Riek Machar, degenerated into a military confrontation.
A 2015 agreement aimed at ending the conflict failed after hostilities again broke out between the two rivals.
The war has killed tens of thousands of people and uprooted about a quarter of the country’s population of 12 million.
In the statement, Malong said Kiir “concentrated all his efforts with the help of a small clique around him to quite literally loot the coffers of our great nation to total bankruptcy”.
It was not immediately clear whether Malong’s organisation would join forces with rebels to fight Kiir militarily or would try to challenge him politically.
However, Malong said he was ready to participate in planned talks to end the conflict in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa later in the month.
Although the opposition was initially solidly behind Machar, in recent years anti-Kiir forces have splintered into factions which has partly complicated efforts to end the war.
“If he wants to fight, let him fight and we will meet him in the field,” Makuei said. (Reuters/NAN)