South
Sudan's hopes and dreams are slipping away as residents now only see corruption
and an uncaring government. People such as Davidka Clement made the trek from
their villages to Juba, South Sudan after hearing that South Sudan, which had fought for decades for its
independence from Sudan, would become an independent country with its own
leaders, who would care about people like her. However, when the country of
South Sudan became a reality, despite much celebration, it did not change the
circumstances for poor women such as Davidka. She is only one out of many among
the pebble women of Rock City. These women tap rocks together in order to break
them down into piles of pebbles to then be sold to a nearby quarry, where
people buy gravel by the truckload for road building and construction. It takes
a whole 10 days to be able to make a pile that is 10 feet high and there are
many sellers in Rock City with few buyers. People like Clement only make about
$1 per day. She states "There's nothing." "What do you do? You
just come and do your work. I go home, my body is in pain. I cry, but I come
back." The freedom that she and others had hoped for was not supposed to
be like this. Having been long marginalized by the Sudanese government, the
southern part of the country was one of the most destitute and least developed
places on the Earth. However, last year's peaceful succession sparked a surge
of hope among the South Sudanese. They felt that with their own flag, oil, and
government, they would be able to build a decent country. But the government has taken the path of many
other rebels turned leaders. Corruption and nepotism are common, public
services are negligible, and there is more demolition than reconstruction. The government recently suspended oil
production in which accounts for 98% of its revenue, due to a dispute with
Sudan. The joy of independence has vanished as only a strict economy remains.
Poor people came to the city in hopes that the government was going to help
them but the government doesn't want to help. Promise of a better life in Juba,
due to South Sudan's oil money, also drew thousands of Kenyans and Ugandans. But
hospitals, schools, and medical clinics are scarce, and the ones that are
around are scruffy and grim. Private clinics are trying to make it, but even
they are struggling to make ends meet. There are costs of basic services such
as water and electricity that the government doesn't provide. Further deteriorating
conditions and corruption are serious problems. The management has failed as
they have taken oil for personal benefit and some politicians have millions
while others have nothing. The government is also demolishing the shops of poor
shopkeepers in order to make "improvements." However, many of these
shopkeepers worry if they will ever get their land back. People such as Clement
just wish that the government would look at them as someone who is poor and
offer them work so that they can survive.
The poor and disadvantaged in South Sudan are facing vast
social inequalities. The poor are marginalized and socially stratified based on
their low social class and lack of power, wealth, and prestige. It is the
corrupt government and elite that profit and have millions while others continue
to have nothing. But poverty is a social problem that the majority of the world’s
population has to face as 1.4 billion people live on less than $1.25 a day and
with people such as Davidka Clement living on even less than that, earning only
a $1 a day. Poverty is a social problem that has an objective element as it can
be measured and is also a subjective idea as it is experienced, felt, and lived
through. The poor living in Sudan are experiencing and living through extreme
conditions just to survive as their government has become completely corrupted.
The poor within the country of South Sudan are kept poor because the rich and
corrupt government is making them so. The government is causing the poor to
have to be dependent. This inherent system of stratification in South Sudan is
causing their society to have unfair divisions between the poor and the elite. Within
the article, Davidka had also noted that she had been working since she was a
child and like most girls in her village, she did not attend school. This shows
how based on gender, people within South Sudan are stratified as well. Women
are less likely to attend school and they are more likely to have to work under
poor conditions, remaining poor. This can also be an example of the
feminization of poverty as the majority of the world’s impoverished people are
women and children. The women of South Sudan, especially the rock working women
are an example of how impoverished some of the women in this country actually
are. But these impoverished people of South Sudan have no control over their
situation as it is the powerful elite that control the political, economic,
cultural, and social institutions of their society. Thus, some serious social
changes need to be made in the South Sudanese society to help the poor to
better survive. Many countries need mobilization for action to try and fight against
this social injustice as class stratification has become a serious social issue
in many countries around the world.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-south-sudan-rock-city-20120322,0,6044263.story?page=1&utm_medium=feed&track=rss&utm_campaign=Feed%3A%20latimes%2Fnews%2Fnationworld%2Fworld%20%28L.A.%20Times%20-%20World%20News%29&utm_source=feedburner
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