S. Sudan national security agents spied on Kenyan citizens

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December 19, 2016 (JUBA/NAIROBI) – South Sudanese National Security
Services (NSS) agents spied on Kenyan nationals in completecontravention of
provisions of the young nation’s Transitional Constitution, High Court
documents Sudan Tribune obtained last week, indicates.

The National Security Service headquarters in Juba, South Sudan (File photo)

The High Court dossier also exposed the surveillance program used by the
country’s national security service operatives.According to the document,
Napoleon Adok Gai, a South Sudanese security operative, who still lives
with his family in Kenya and has an extensive network of friends and
associates who mainly did phone monitoring.

Adok was unmasked in court during trial into corruption that allegedly
occurred in South Sudan president’s office.

Court papers, for instance shows that Anyieth Chaat Paul, the wife to John
Agou had her Kenyan mobile phone number wiretapped and monitored by
operative Adok, who was working in collaboration with the Kenya Police
anti-terrorism unit.

“Her [Anyieth] debacle started when her husband John Agou was arrested by
South Sudan security services on 29th May 2015. Anyieth lived in Nairobi
and have no responsibility on day today running of her husband’s business,
only taking care of her two years old son. You may describe her as a house
wife,” the documents read.

During the investigation of Agou, the investigation committee reportedly
wrote to the Kenyan Ministry of Justice as well as the country’s Attorney
General requesting that Anyieth be extradited to South Sudan.

“The Kenya government through the Ministry of Justice wrote back to the
investigation committee through the Ministry of Justice of South Sudan that
Kenya and South Sudan have no extradition treaty,” states the document.

Kenya’s Justice Ministry, it later emerged, advised South Sudan government
to open a case against Anyieth in Kenya and if their request was approved,
then the Attorney General will extradite her back to South Sudan.

Sudan Tribune reliably learnt that Anyieth was later abducted by security
agents from Nairobi, via Uganda, and taken to South Sudan, after the legal
process failed.

Adok, working with the help of one General Intelligence Bureau officer,
Guem David Diing, reportedly aided the abduction of Anyieth from
Nairobi.Diing was the secretary of the investigation committee, while Adok
headed the technical committee of the investigation put in place by South
Sudanese authorities to investigate Agou’s case.

Court documents also implicated Sam Gakunga, a close confidante of Kenya’s
President, Uhuru Kenyatta who is reportedly the contact person giving all
sort of assistance to South Sudanese national security service
operatives.Gakunga, sources say, is well connected with the President of
South Sudan, Salva Kiir and all his senior aides.

Meanwhile, Kur Ayuen Kou, a victim of Adok’s “illegal” act, told court that
the latter wrote an intelligence report against him [Kou], Abdon Agaw, the
Secretary General of government of South Sudan, Chaat Paul Nul and Mayen
Wol Jong, two of who are now imprisoned for life on this case.

“Another evidence phone recording Napoleon played during the court hearing
was a phone call from the former investigator to Kur Ayuen asking him to
appear before the investigation committee,” the source revealed.

He added, “The investigator further told Kur that some members of the
investigation committee just wanted to drag you into the case for some
political and ethnic hatred simply you are from Dinka Bor [Jonglei
state]General Gordon Mangar, a member of the investigation committee,
reportedly questioned why his colleagues intended to implicate Kur, whose
name was not being mentioned anywhere among those being investigated.

A member of the probe committee wanted Kur arrested, the source told Sudan
Tribune, adding General Charles Ciec Mayor, said “Bor people have sat on
our neck for a very long time, if he is another one from Bor, let him be
arrested and we would find him what he has committed”.

A telecommunication expert told Sudan Tribune the system operated by South
Sudan’s security services is an advance surveillance system that monitors
all numbers.“The system work this way, a telephone number is programed into
the monitoring unit. Once that phone number calls or receive calls, it will
alert the operator with a red flash on its screen and then the operator
will than just press the recording button,” stressed the expert.He added,
“This system does not have a jurisdiction control. As long as you know the
number of someone, you are able to monitor his or her phone calls at any
time”.

Currently, South Sudan does not have in place a law governing phone
recording or wiretapping activities.Attempts by Sudan Tribune to contact
the director of information at the national security service were futile.

(ST).

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