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Sudan Tribune

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Police trainees protest food shortage in Eastern Equatoria State

By Manyang Mayom

July 29, 2010 (JUBA) – Over hundred police trainees in Eastern Equatoria State (EES), have staged a peaceful protest against food shortage in their training camp.

Police_in_south_Sudan.jpgOne policeman, Owen Bosco, told Sudan Tribune that they marched from the learning wing at Himodonge Hills to Torit town, and gathered at the Freedom Square where they delivered speeches claiming that poor living conditions and food shortage had resulted in seven days without food. Bosco also added that trainees did not receive their food rations for about a week.

Furthermore, the trainees’ representative said that lack of proper accommodation as well as unhealthy environment had caused diseases. He also complained about the lack of latrines. “There are few latrines but such latrines are not enough to all people”, he pointed out.

Meanwhile, the deputy governor of Eastern Equatoria State, Nartisio Loluke, has strongly denounced the claims of protesting police trainees. Loluke said that the trainees’ protest was actuated by the political influence of some state members who visited the training camp and talked the trainees into doing “such barbaric acts and spoiling the name of the state’s government.”

Loluke further said that his government intends to strengthen the capacity of management teams and beef up security in the training camp.

South Sudan has been training a thousand-strong police force to be tasked with enforcing security during the referendum period.

In a related development, a journalist working for the government-owned local radio station has claimed he was tortured while covering the protest at the Freedom Square. The journalist, Hasan Gama Oscar, told Sudan Tribune that he had encountered “hostility” while he was covering the police trainees’ protest. Gama Oscar said that he was tortured and that state media were ordered not to cover the protest or broadcast any newscasts about it. According to Oscar, the order extended to both local radios and newspapers.

6 Comments

  • Sudan virus
    Sudan virus

    Police trainees protest food shortage in Eastern Equatoria State
    Police are supposed to receive military training before or after police professional training(theory).
    What is this police strike all about.nonsense.

    Starving in military training is part of the packages of military training, so that you trainees copy up with some situations that military/policemen will face in their fulfillment of security duty.

    However, the extent should not reach red mark.

    Reply
  • mack waweru
    mack waweru

    Police trainees protest food shortage in Eastern Equatoria State
    The police trainees have a right to protest if they are neglected by the state government to provide them with food and healthful accommodation. These are basic necessities afforded to anybody.
    Such people when deployed, would not provide good services to the people, but become corrupt to compensate what was denied them by the authorities concerned. Only civil population would pay the price.

    Shame and embarrassment for the government’s failure to allow such a situation for military personnels to protest. What would civilian do?

    Mack Awer

    Reply
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