Morning comes softly to Greater Pibor, where the light stretches across grasslands and river bends before finding the low roofs of towns still learning the habits of peace. The air carries ordinary sounds—footsteps, distant voices, the scrape of tools—yet beneath them lies a quieter shift, one less visible than new roads or rebuilt markets. It is the sound of questions being asked, carefully and for the first time, and of answers being pursued with patience rather than fear.
In recent months, the United Nations Mission in South Sudan has been working alongside local authorities in Greater Pibor to strengthen the foundations of justice. Training sessions, modest rooms with wooden desks and notebooks, have become places where police officers, prosecutors, and investigators learn how to gather facts, preserve evidence, and follow a case from its first report to a lawful conclusion. For communities long shaped by cycles of conflict and informal settlement of disputes, the act of investigation itself carries weight.
Participants describe a quiet transformation. Learning how to document a crime scene, how to interview witnesses without coercion, how to build a file that can stand in court—these are technical skills, but they ripple outward. They offer a different rhythm to public life, one where accountability is not improvised but practiced, step by step. UNMISS officials say the aim is not to impose an external system, but to support local institutions as they grow into their roles, rooted in South Sudanese law and community realities.
Greater Pibor’s challenges are well known. Years of insecurity, limited infrastructure, and scarce resources have left justice services thin and uneven. Many disputes have traditionally been resolved through customary mechanisms, which remain vital but are often strained when faced with serious crimes. By strengthening formal investigative capacity, UNMISS hopes to narrow the gap between community expectations and state responsibility, allowing the two to coexist rather than compete.
The work extends beyond classrooms. Mentorship, field support, and coordination with local leaders help ensure that new skills do not fade once training ends. Women and youth, often the most affected by violence and least represented in justice processes, are increasingly part of the conversation, their experiences shaping how investigations are approached. Progress is incremental, measured not in headlines but in files properly kept and cases no longer abandoned halfway.
As the day closes over Pibor County, the light softens again, settling into the same landscapes that have seen both harm and healing. The presence of justice here remains fragile, easily tested by the next crisis. Yet the simple declaration from a trainee—recognizing, perhaps with surprise, the ability to investigate—signals something durable. It suggests that beyond peace agreements and patrols, the slow craft of justice is taking hold, offering communities a way to move forward with fewer shadows and clearer paths.
AI Image Disclaimer Illustrations were created using AI tools and are not real photographs.
Sources United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) United Nations South Sudan Ministry of Justice Local authorities of Greater Pibor

