High-Stakes Exams Under Scrutiny
Secondary-school candidates across South Sudan sit for the national Certificate of Secondary Education on 1 December 2025. As exam day nears, the hunt for leaked papers—locally dubbed machot—intensifies, signalling a long-running challenge for educators and policymakers.
Officials warn that unchecked cheating erodes public confidence in an already fragile education system struggling to serve a post-conflict population eager for stability and opportunity.
Impact on Meritocracy and Skills
Merit-based assessment is designed to reward diligence and curiosity. When collusion, impersonation or paper leaks skew results, honest learners are sidelined and the message becomes bleak: integrity yields less than shortcuts.
The consequences surface in workplaces. Certificates obtained without competence send unprepared doctors to clinics and ill-trained engineers to construction sites, with risks that extend far beyond individual careers.
Roots of the Cheating Epidemic
Parents, often investing scarce income in one child’s success, face immense pressure. For some, failure could mean prolonged poverty, so paying for advance answers feels rational despite legal and moral hazards.
Teachers cite overcrowded classrooms, limited textbooks and irregular salaries as drivers of misconduct. ‘When remuneration is delayed, some staff turn a blind eye,’ admits education commentator Amaju Ubur Yalamoi Ayani.
Strategies for Restoring Trust
Authorities have tightened invigilation guidelines and introduced serialised exam papers, yet enforcement gaps persist. Analysts argue that penalties must be swift and transparent to outweigh the perceived gains of cheating.
Longer-term, investment in teacher training, digital learning tools and psychosocial support can build classrooms where preparation outperforms malpractice. Adequate salaries, say unions, would further cut incentives for collusion.
Why Integrity Matters for National Renewal
South Sudan’s roadmap to peace and prosperity rests on skilled graduates capable of steering health, infrastructure and governance projects. Academic fraud threatens that talent pipeline and, by extension, national recovery.
‘The classrooms we shape today build the leaders we need tomorrow,’ notes a senior Education Ministry official, urging collective responsibility to protect evaluation standards.

