Revive South Sudan Youth

Revive South Sudan Youth purpose or objectives for page to achieve a better understanding for south Sudanes youths in diaspora

07/03/2026

This is the reality. If the so-called international community, IGAD, the Troika, and the United States truly intends to address the suffering of the South Sudanese people, it must listen and give serious consideration to this speech as part of the effort to find a lasting solution

06/03/2026

Time is in our hands now to make this country better. Ignore it at your own risk

05/03/2026

Can you imagine if the same Minister of Information and became the current Minister of Justice talking in this way who can be judge. Since he himself is the current Minister of Justice, what would the level of corruption look like? This means that all government personnel, no one is innocent, declaring the president as the main pickers of corruption and mass murder

24/02/2026

Women are not easy to manage, even female animals, they become jealous 👀

20/02/2026

Life not easy even animals facing difficulties

20/02/2026

People talking about reconciliation but Let us speak honestly.
the crisis in South Sudan did not start today. It was built over years through manipulation, propaganda, and the deliberate planting of tribal hatred between the two largest communities — the Dinka and the Nuer. Those in power turned political disagreements into ethnic hostility in order to secure and protect their control.

From the early days of the SPLA struggle, ideological differences already existed. The disagreement between John Garang and Riek Machar was not originally tribal — it was political. John Garang fought for a united “New Sudan,” a reformed Sudan as a whole. Riek Machar insisted that the struggle must focus on South Sudan’s right to self-determination. History later proved that self-determination led to the independence of South Sudan.

But instead of presenting this as a difference in political vision, the conflict was reframed as tribal betrayal.

After the split, many Nuer sons holding different ranks within the army were killed in places such as New Kush and Katinga. Rather than explaining that the disagreement was about ideology, the narrative pushed to communities was that “the Nuer hate us” or “the Nuer betrayed us.” This was not simply misunderstanding — it was political messaging that planted long-term division.

From that point forward, the idea was cultivated in some circles that power must never fall into Nuer hands. Children grew up hearing that they were the majority and destined to rule, and that the Nuer were a threat to that dominance. Over decades, this thinking hardened into fear and hostility.

Today, even when people suffer under poor leadership, some still stand with it — not because it benefits them, but because they fear what they have been told for years: that if the Nuer lead, revenge will follow. This fear was manufactured. It was politically useful.

The truth is this: the problem is not ordinary Dinka people, and it is not ordinary Nuer people. The problem is a system that survived by dividing them.

South Sudan cannot move forward while one community believes it must permanently dominate another. No tribe owns this country. No tribe sacrificed more than another. Every community paid in blood for independence.

If there is to be real peace, it must begin with truth. It requires openly rejecting the narrative that one group must block another from leadership. It requires acknowledging that political disagreements were turned into ethnic hatred. And it requires removing the fear that leadership by one tribe automatically means oppression of another.

Every South Sudanese has the right to lead this country. Riek Machar struggled for this nation. So did many others from different communities. Leadership should be decided by the people — not by tribal fear or inherited narratives.

I supported the independence of this country because I love it. I believed in a nation where all tribes would stand equal. My father and many others sacrificed for that dream. That dream cannot survive if we continue to divide ourselves.

South Sudan cannot exist without all its tribes. If one tribe tries to rule alone, the country weakens. If we remain divided, we all lose.

The future will only be built on equality, truth, and genuine reconciliation not domination.

Garang Ateny, you will regret that post. It even proves that you are uneducated—making promises about something that can...
13/02/2026

Garang Ateny, you will regret that post. It even proves that you are uneducated—making promises about something that can change within a minute. Do you really think defeating the Lou Nuer is something simple?

You cannot say that the IO will never recapture any territory taken by your so-called Kiir family regime. Even the United States, which has the most powerful military in the world, cannot claim it will never be defeated. Look at what happened to U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan and Somalia. Nobody questions how powerful the U.S. military is in terms of equipment, well-trained soldiers, technology, and technical capacity. Yet sometimes even it has faced defeat.

I don’t blame you, since you seem to know nothing beyond supporting a family regime.

The point I want to make is this: regimes can collapse in the blink of an eye—very soon, not later than this year. Remember, the Syrian war started in 2011, the same year South Sudan gained independence. The Syrian regime was very strong and had powerful allies around the world. Many believed nobody would dare to challenge Russia, and even the USA could not easily intervene—but look at what happened.

Go back and look at Libya as well. The end of dictatorship always comes, and it often ends badly.

29/01/2026

Hahaha, look at this idiot talking like a fish without knowing why he's going to die! A fighter for food, you love dying just for food that only you can eat, not for your whole community! How do you even know you'll survive and be able to come and eat that food? It's a grave mistake to go and die among the enemy just to enslave your people and serve your own interests. That's why you want to annihilate your entire people. But you, you'll be in utter misery. Frankly, nobody wants a Nuer son to die defending the enemy and then kill his brother because of the Dinka. It's a disgrace to him and to all of us Nuer. Why don't the Dinka kill each other? Why do we Nuer prefer to betray our own people instead of staying united and facing the enemy? Now we're killing each other. To those who rise up against their brothers, do you think the enemy will leave you alone tomorrow after annihilating your people? Why not follow the example of those of Bol Mel, Akol Kuor, Malong Awan, and the other Dinkas, even those of Bar El Ghazal? Have you seen what happened? Why do you allow yourselves to be used to annihilate your brother, only to be treated like dirt afterward? Kiir has proven to you time and again that he is untrustworthy. No matter how you kill your own people today, tomorrow he will endanger you, destroy you, or imprison you once he has finished using you. He knows he has made many enemies and that no one will accept you anymore. He will then try to recruit someone who has no enemies yet so that he can use them. Even if Kiir were to leave today, his regime would continue to exist, and the same system would persist. That is why it is preferable for Kiir's regime to disappear in order to put in place a new democratic system: a system that protects the identity of citizens, a system where no one is above the law, a system where resources are fairly distributed, a system where every citizen has a say, whether they are in the minority or the majority, a system that prohibits the plundering of the country's resources but uses them to build hospitals, roads, schools, etc., a system where no citizen should suffer from hunger, where every citizen has a home, and a system where no one should own two houses while another owns none.

22/01/2026

A painful reality. But the worst part is, why are you defending them? If someone treats you like subhumans, why would you die defending them and their families? They live in luxury, their children live abroad and drive luxury cars, while you, here, suffer. Having clean water is a miracle, let alone food and shoes. We, the people of South Sudan, must unite and understand that Kiir and his groups are manipulating the local population, using tribal rhetoric to wage their own war and maintain power—power that benefits only them and their families.


The Kiir family regime and its gangs of thieves must go this year; this is their last 2026.

Power to the people 💪👈

14/01/2026

The message is clear: why do we let their children survive while innocent children die because of them? We must act; no one is safe until peace returns to South Sudan in general, whether you are abroad or not. Let the money be used wisely, my people, to overthrow the Kirr family regime and its traitors.

Power to the people 💪👈

07/01/2026
07/01/2026

This is how our women behave in Western countries. Those who should be blamed for our problems are the Kiir regime and his family. If Kiir weren't targeting civilians and killing them, no one would want to face this situation. And the culture is pervasive, where women disrespect their husbands because they have power or money. Even white people themselves don't act this way; love and life are a union of understanding. But our women in the diaspora have taken it differently. They try to adapt to a culture that isn't their own, even if it's wrong because the people who live there don't practice it that way.

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