Franklin Cudjoe writes - RAZAK MEDIA

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Sunday, August 5, 2018

Franklin Cudjoe writes


I'm heart broken. My friend, Harvard graduate and political activist Peter Biar Ajak was arrested by the South Sudan National Security Service despite no charges having been made against him, his friends and family say.- News.

I call on the South Sudanese government to respect positive dissent and release Peter now. I shall be sending a letter of appeal on the same subject to the South Sudanese embassy in Ghana and the Africa Union tomorrow. I met Peter and his wife recently in Cambridge when we were both speakers at the Cambridge University Conference on Africa. We were hosted in the apartment of Professor Theodore Menelik in Cambridge, UK. Theodore himself is originally from DR Congo, where he has been helping marginalised groups with education and development activities.Professor Theodore Menelik-Mfuni hosted the leadership and speakers of the Cambridge University Africa Students Union.

Pictured here is Peter and me here having late night discussions on South Sudan politics and what must be done. If you are in the position to send a word to the South Sudanese government to reverse the decision, please do. At some point we must be able to mobilise resources for the youth in South Sudan and other African countries in political turmoil to seek peace.

Below is Peter's bio. Peter is currently studying towards his PhD at the University of Cambridge. He is also the Founder and Director of the Center for Strategic Analyses and Research (C-SAR), an independent policy think-tank based in Juba, South Sudan and the CEO of South Sudan Wrestling Entertainment (SSWE). Prior to founding the C-SAR and joining the IGC, Mr. Ajak was the World Bank economist based in South Sudan. In that position, Mr Ajak advised the Government of South Sudan on areas of economic policy. He provided technical analyses in the development of South Sudan Development Plan, the South Sudan Growth Strategy, and South Sudan Vision 2040 among others. Mr Ajak has consulted with the Department for International Development (DfID), the Conflict Dynamic International (CDI), the Ministry of Finance & Economic Planning, the Ministry of Defense and Veteran Affairs, and the Office of the President of South Sudan.

In the lead up to the 2011 Referendum, Mr Ajak founded South Sudan Wrestling Entertainment (SSWE), a private company that uses the South Sudanese indigenous sport of wrestling to promote peace and reconciliation among the tribes of South Sudan. He was featured on the CNN African Voices in August 2011. Mr Ajak was recently appointed a member of a committee under the Office of the President tasked with drafting of South Sudan National Security Policy and Strategy. He is one of over 4,000 Sudanese “Lost Boys” who came to the United States in 2001. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics from La Salle University in Philadelphia, PA, where he was the sole recipient of the Joseph Flubacher Scholarship and the James A. Finnegan Memorial award for exemplifying the ideals of Judeo-Christian social justice. Mr Ajak was Institute for International Public Policy (IIPP) Fellow, Cohort 11. In addition, he was a Public Service Fellow at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, where he earned a Master of Public Administration in International Development (MPA/ID) degree in 2009. While at the Harvard Kennedy School, he was a Teaching Fellow for International Capital Markets and Macroeconomic Theory and Policy. He was featured in the Harvard Kennedy School Magazine in the summer of 2009.

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