Request for Donation

Welcome to SSEC, your action is invited to make a difference!



Dear Mr/Ms X,

South Sudan Education for Change (SSEC) is respectfully asking you for a $1- 53,000 donation to help support the Pabil Primary School Project. SSEC has the goal of raising $53,000, and your donation would take us closer to reaching our goal. To further this goal, SSEC has partnered with The Hope Alliance, a non-profit organization, which allows all donations to be tax deductible.


Goal


SSEC's goal is to increase the literacy level of children in the South Sudan community by providing a favorable learning environment for the children. Currently, classes are held outside, under trees. SSEC would like to build a school in which classes could be held.


The Role of SSEC

The role of SSEC, in partnership with the South Sudan community, is to help build a school by raising financial resources. Once the school building is completed classes would move indoors. 250-300 children would attend the school each year. The government of South Sudan has agreed to continue to provide and pay teachers and the community will maintain the day to day operation and maintenance of the school. SSEC's role would then be limited to providing supplies when needed.




Where We Are Today


Currently, SSEC had spent $30,000 on the project; specifically on building materials such as iron sheets, timbers, rods, cement, grabble, concrete, and blocks production. Another $53,000 is need for additional building materials and contractors. Construction has been delayed until additional funds can be raised. We hope to continue with the construction in December.


Benefit to the Community


Apart from providing a physical building to educate the children, the school would benefit the community in many additional ways. It could be used as a community center, providing a location for community development projects such as agriculture, small business, and health and sanitation trainings. The Diasporas could utilize the facility to transfer their knowledge and skills both when visiting home or by channeling their friends that are on humanitarian mission to the facility.

Thank you for considering a donation to our project and investing in the education of the children of South Sudan. Any donations should be made payable to The Hope Alliance, with a note indicating the "Solomon School Project." Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions or visit our blog at http://www.solomonawan.blogspot.com/ to see progress on the project.




Sincerely,


Solomon Awan


Managing Director


(801) 694-3048













































My Photo
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Currently an MBA student at Westminster College in Salt Lake City. Mading is originally from Jonglei State, South Sudan. He is also the Managing Director for the South Sudan Education for Change.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The People We are Trying to Help are Being Massacred

Reuters)

General News
23/09/2009 10:12:37

UPDATE: More than 100 dead in South Sudan attack - officials
*Surge in violence threatens peace deal, southern stability

*Some locals say attack was revenge for cattle rustling

By Skye Wheeler

JUBA, Sudan, Sept 21 (Reuters) - More than 100 people were killed when tribesmen raided a south Sudan village, burning buildings and attacking churchgoers, officials said on Monday, in a further escalation of violence in the oil-producing region.

A surge of tribal killings this year has sparked fears for the stability of Sudan''s underdeveloped south, still emerging from two decades of civil war.

Fighters from the Lou Nuer tribe attacked the village of Duk Padiet, home to a rival Dinka group, on Sunday morning while many of the villagers were in church, officials told Reuters.

The extent of the carnage only emerged on Monday when officials reached the remote settlement in Jonglei state.

A total of 51 villagers and 28 southern soldiers, national security and police officers guarding the settlement were killed, said southern army spokesman Kuol Diem Kuol.

"From the attackers 23 bodies were found on the ground. These attackers were found in uniform with arms and organized in a military organisation in platoons with G3 rifles," he said.

The United Nations estimates more than 1,200 people have died in ethnic attacks in south Sudan this year.

Some of the fiercest fighting has been in Jonglei, parts of which are included in a largely unexplored oil concession operated by France''s Total.

Southern politicians have accused their former civil war foes from north Sudan of arming rival tribes to destabilise the region in the build-up to elections in 2010 and a referendum on southern secession in 2011. Khartoum denies the accusation.

THOUSANDS FLED AS BUILDINGS BURNED

"This is a campaign against the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (the faltering 2005 accord that ended Sudan''s north-south civil war) and against the people of Duk," Mayen Ngor, the commissioner of surrounding Duk County, told Reuters by phone from near the scene of the attack.

Ngor said the attackers burned down 260 huts, the police station and local government buildings, injuring 46 people and forcing thousands to flee.

Around two million people died in the 1983-2005 war between Sudan''s Muslim north and mostly Christian south. The conflict also set southern tribes against each other as the north backed rival southern militias.

Some analysts and southern leaders say they fear the new violence marks a return of the southern militias, backed by groups trying to undermine the peace deal, or local leaders, strengthening their power bases in the run-up to elections.

The 2005 peace deal which promised elections and a referendum also gave the south a share of the country''s oil wealth and set up a semi-autonomous southern government.

North-south relations have remained tense and analysts say many of the northern political elite are nervous about the referendum, and the prospects of losing the south, the source of most of Sudan''s proven oil reserves.

South Sudan has long been plagued by ethnic clashes, mostly fought over cattle and related feuds. But observers have been shocked by the scale of this year''s violence, where tribal fighters have attacked villages and killed women and children.

Members of the Lou Nuer tribe this month denied their fighters had joined militias, telling Reuters most of the recent raids were revenge attacks for past cattle rustling.

"It is just cattle raiding ... It''s just revenge," said William Khor Reath, executive director for Akobo County, a mostly Lou Nuer area in Jonglei state.

Traditional disputes have been exacerbated by a ready supply of guns left over from the civil war. (Editing by Andrew Heavens and Tim Pearce)

http://www.gurtong.org/photogallery/Duk-Padiet-Attacks/index.htm

What is the goal for SSEC?