There are many ways to describe the failed state of South Sudan under the SPLM-IG. Diplomats prefer to call it a “fragile state.” Economists say “distorted.” Politicians mumble “transitional.” But when a system begins to look less like a government and more like a well-organized criminal syndicate with modern symbols such as a flag and other national items, honesty demands a sharper term: gangster capitalism. However, this is not capitalism in a…
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