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South Sudan minister spends SSP 30,000,000 on son’s funeral

The hot news reaching The Drone Media at this sorrowful season of COVID-19 lockdown is that a South Sudan minister has spent about sh 876 millions (30,000,000 SSP) on his son’s funeral.

The deceased, Wool Salvatore Garang, was reportedly deported from the US recently; he allegedly drunk alcohol a lot. According to close sources he died of a mysterious disease.

In a leaked document found by “Al-mashhed” for South Sudan Ministry of Finance dated 5/ May /2020, signed by Silvano Maleth the director of administration and finance at the ministry and the letter approved by the undersecretary shows.

According to the letter, Silvano asked the undersecretary to pay a sum of thirty million South Sudanese pounds (30,000,000 SSP) the equivalent of one hundred and ten thousand US dollars ($110,000) as the cost of the funeral for minister’s son who died in the past days and the letter states that the amount is to cover the costs of the funeral.

Children of African ministers and leaders as well as the rich are always taken abroad to study, but as fate has it; they become unruly and misfits most times. Therefore, Salvatore Wool Garang was no different.

A source who got a chance and met some children of Ugandan ministers in the US, says if the ministers knew they would not send their children abroad. “They over drink, drug abuse and do promiscuity as well as sodomy,” a source reveals.

It seems ministers in the developing countries’ governments prefer foreign universities to local ones as many of them have sent their children abroad for higher education. Almost all ministers in the governments have sent their children to foreign universities.
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A number of indicators have been developed to assess levels of corruption in Africa. Some of these measurements, such as the Corruption Perceptions
Index, World Governance Indicators, Ibrahim Index of African Governance and Afrobarometer, are influential because they have shaped foreign policy, investment decisions and aid allocation, as well as country risk analysis on the continent.