South Sudan’s new cybercrime law ramps up threat of jail for journalists

South Sudan's President Salva Kiir Mayardit in Ethiopia in 2025.

South Sudan's President Salva Kiir Mayardit in Ethiopia in 2025. South Sudan has had a poor press freedom record since celebrating independence from Sudan in 2011, with at least 10 journalists killed. (Photo: Reuters/Tiksa Negeri)

Kampala, April 9, 2026—The Committee to Protect Journalists calls on authorities in South Sudan to urgently reform its new cybercrimes law, which punishes defamation with up to five years in prison, criminalizes speech on overbroad grounds, and fails to protect whistleblowers and public interest reporting.

While government officials maintain the law is intended to address online fraud and digital harassment, human rights activists have raised concerns that it could criminalize legitimate online activity and be misused to further restrict press freedom.

South Sudanese human rights activist and researcher James Bidal told CPJ that the Act’s vague definitions of “false or misleading information” (Section 44) and “undesirable content” (Section 42) leave journalists and other citizens in a dangerous position of “legal uncertainty” as these terms can be interpreted subjectively by authorities.

“In its current form, the Act presents a risk of potential misuse and self-censorship,” said Bidal, who is Head of the Secretariat for the South Sudan Human Rights Defenders Network (SSHRDN).

President Salva Kiir signed the Cybercrimes and Computer Misuse Act, 2026 into law on February 18, replacing the Cybercrimes and Computer Misuse Provisional Order, 2021.

A growing number of African nations, including Gambia (2018), Ghana (2001), Kenya (2017), Lesotho (2018), Liberia (2019), Malawi (2025), Seychelles (2021), Sierra Leone (2020), South Africa (2024), Uganda (2026), and Zimbabwe (2014), have abolished criminal defamation laws. Cybercrimes laws continue to be used to jail journalists, including by re-criminalizing defamation and prohibiting speech on broad grounds,  although this legislation is being challenged in countries such as  Kenya, Zambia and Nigeria

“South Sudan’s 2026 cybercrimes law is fundamentally flawed. Not only does it increase the jail sentences for defamation and false news, but it also contains myriad poorly crafted provisions that leave it open to abusive interpretation,” said CPJ Africa Program Coordinator Muthoki Mumo. “South Sudanese authorities need to go back to the drawing board to enact a law that tackles legitimate cybercrime concerns without undermining freedom of expression or making it even more difficult for journalists to do their jobs.”

South Sudan’s 2008 penal code already punishes defamation with up to two years in prison and/or a fine.

Imprisoning journalists for causing reputational damage is incompatible with international human rights standards. Both the United Nations and the African Union recommend the decriminalization of defamation.

Key cybercrime provisions that could put journalists behind bars

Journalists with Eye Radio at work in Juba in 2019. (Photo: AFP/ Simon Maina)

Eight provisions in the South Sudanese law that could pose a threat to journalism include:

Journalists risk censorship, detention, and death

A man reads the Juba Monitor, with a heading referring to the killing of The New Nation’s Peter Moi in 2015. (Photo: AFP/Samir Bol)

South Sudan has had a poor press freedom record since celebrating independence from Sudan in 2011. Conflict and tensions persist, with journalists facing censorship, arbitrary detention, and intimidation. CPJ has documented at least 10 journalists killed since 2012.

In 2025, authorities suspended social media to block news from neighboring Sudan and the online news outlet Hot in Juba over unspecified complaints.

Information Minister Ateny Wek and the regulatory South Sudan Media Authority’s managing director Elijah Alier Kuai did not respond to CPJ’s requests for comment via messaging app.

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