Our Vision & Mission
The vision of the PRF is to envision a free, peaceful, democratic, and prosperous South Sudan where all citizens are well secured, protected and equally represented in their government. The Mission of the PRF is to mobilize and rally the people of the South Sudan at home and in diaspora behind the leadership of the PRF to oust kleptocratic regime in Juba and establish a strong and independent institutions of government that promote healing, reconciliation, and prosperity for all.
Advocacy


Raising voices to challenge corruption and demand accountability.


Mobilization
Uniting citizens to resist oppression and reclaim their rights.
Providing essential support to communities torn by violence.
Support
Our Work
The People’s Resistance Front (PRF), acting in defense of the just aspirations and fundamental rights of the people of South Sudan, recognizes that years of war, repression, and deliberate neglect have devastated communities, uprooted families, and destroyed the basic services upon which civilian life depends. Conscious that millions of our people endure hunger, displacement, disease, and insecurity, and that the primary duty of any legitimate authority is to protect civilians and alleviate their suffering, the PRF affirms that the liberation struggle must also be a struggle to preserve life, dignity, and hope in the midst of conflict.
Mindful of the profound resilience, solidarity, and mutual aid traditions that have long sustained South Sudanese communities in times of hardship, and acknowledging the vital role of humanitarian actors, local, national, and international, in saving lives and upholding human dignity, the PRF is determined to organize its own dedicated humanitarian wing to serve civilians in areas under its influence or control. In doing so, the Movement commits to principles of humanity, impartiality, and respect for the rights of all civilians, without discrimination based on ethnicity, region, religion, gender, or political opinion.


Community Aid
We ensure delivery of essential assistance to our affected communities






Adocacy Efforts
Our Diaspora members advocate for removal of the Genocidal Regime in Juba
Our Fight
Under President Salva Kiir’s prolonged rule, the people of South Sudan have been abandoned to overlapping crises of hunger, disease, violence, and mass displacement, as government forces, allied militias, and rival armed groups wage wars that destroy civilian life. Conflict and regime-driven insecurity have pushed millions into severe food shortages, with communities facing catastrophic hunger while floods, a broken health system, and preventable disease outbreaks like cholera ravage an already suffering population. These deliberate, politically driven conflicts, often inflamed along ethnic lines, have uprooted millions from their homes, turning South Sudan into one of the world’s worst displacement and refugee crises and trapping families between starvation, sickness, and unending insecurity realities, the PRF is determined to end by fighting for the rights and dignity of every citizen.








Faces and momentsthat defines our resistance.
Who We Are
The PRF is founded on the belief that South Sudan must be rebuilt through a new political settlement that ends domination by narrow elites and replaces it with genuinely inclusive, accountable, and people‑centred governance. It envisions a state where every community has an equal voice in national decision‑making, and where power is exercised in trust for the public good rather than for personal gain.
The PRF firmly rejects ethnic exclusion, authoritarian rule, corruption, impunity, and the militarization of politics, recognizing these as the core drivers of the country’s suffering and instability. It insists that sustainable peace is impossible without justice, truth, and accountability, and that national unity cannot be imposed through repression, patronage, or force, but must be built through respect for human rights, the rule of law, and fair access to resources and opportunities for all South Sudanese.
Across South Sudan and in the diaspora, the Salva Kiir regime is widely seen as an exhausted, discredited government that survives through repression and manipulation rather than genuine popular consent. Years of authoritarian practices, delayed elections, corruption, and violent crackdowns on dissent have convinced many South Sudanese that the government’s claim to democratic legitimacy has long expired. Scholars, activists, and opposition figures routinely describe Kiir’s rule as illegitimate, pointing to its reliance on militarized ethnic patronage, manipulation of peace agreements, and systematic violations of basic rights, which have alienated broad segments of the population at home and abroad.


