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National Symbols “must be respected”: Catholic Bishop in South Sudan on Country’s Flag

Credit: Eye Radio

A Catholic Bishop in South Sudan has weighed in on the country’s Media Authority caution against the circulation of the “wrong version” of the National Flag, calling for respect of national symbols of the world’s newest country. 

On August 25, the Managing Director of the Media Authority of South Sudan, a body that regulates media outlets in the East-Central African nation, issued a memo cautioning against and prohibiting the “Printing, publication, and circulation of the wrong version of the South Sudan National Flag”.

“Media Houses, Advertisement and printing companies are hereby cautioned to immediately cease any printing of the National flag,” Elijah Alier Kuai said in the memo that ACI Africa obtained.

Mr. Alier added, “Failure to comply will incur penalties to the printing and advertisement companies.”

In an interview with ACI Africa, Bishop Alex Lodiong Sakor Eyobo of South Sudan’s Catholic Diocese of Yei has defended the order from the Media Authority of South Sudan, saying the National Flag “is the symbol of the country that must be respected, and people should not joke about it.”

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“The symbol of the national flag goes together side by side with the anthem, these are all symbols that need to be respected by the life we live,” Bishop Lodiong said during the September 1 interview.

The South Sudanese Catholic Bishop who spoke to ACI Africa on the sidelines of the unveiling of the logo for the yearlong Eucharistic Congress and Golden Jubilee celebration of “Sudan and South Sudan hierarchy” underscored the need to control “the release and printing” of national symbols, which he said “must have (an) official outlet” and that “not everybody does it”.

An August 25 Eye Radio report indicates that “the blue color in the triangular shape of the national flag where the yellow star is embedded has been the center of debate. A deep-blue color has occasionally been wrongly printed instead of the correct light blue.”

In his August 25 memo, the Managing Director of the Media Authority of South Sudan instructed all levels of government and public institutions to “remove any incorrect or substandard versions of the flag and replace them with the correct official version.”

The flag of South Sudan was adopted following the 9 January 2005 signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) between the National Congress Party (NCP) in Sudan and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A) that marked the end of two decades of civil conflict.

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Kerbino Kuel Deng is a South Sudanese journalist who is passionate about Church communication. He holds a Bachelor's Degree in Social Communications from the Catholic University of Eastern Africa (CUEA). He currently works as a Journalist for ACI Africa.