Who is Leek Mamer Leek?
Leek Mamer Leek, a youthful community leader from Bor County, has become the centre of a tense national debate. Supporters hail him as a defender of villages and cattle; detractors brand him a destabilising commander with hidden rebel ties.
Origins of the Red Belt Militia
The Red Belt emerged, according to Leek, after repeated cattle raids and the collapse of local policing. Unlike classic insurgencies, the group claims no political manifesto, instead vowing to patrol grazing corridors and protect civilians where state reach is thin.
Alleged Recruitment Attempts
Leek’s recorded testimony alleges that journalist-turned-political-actor Mading Ngor Akech lured him to Nairobi on the promise of safety. Once there, he says, introductions were arranged with rebel emissaries. When Leek declined to enlist, he was reportedly abandoned in a city hotel.
Separately, Hon. Ateny Pech is accused of courting the Red Belt as a private enforcement arm against rivals in Bor. After Leek refused, Ateny allegedly rebranded the outfit a threat and urged security organs to neutralise it, sparking speculation of politically driven retaliation.
Security Agencies at a Crossroads
Observers argue that state operatives now face a pivotal choice: treat Leek as a hostile combatant or as a witness to attempted rebel recruitment. Eliminating him, critics warn, would erase first-hand evidence while allowing the architects of coercion to evade scrutiny.
Broader Political Stakes in Bor
Bor’s elite occupy influential seats in Juba’s cabinet and security hierarchy. From veterans like Kuol Manyang Juuk to current minister Michael Makuei Lueth, the county is deeply woven into the state. Claims of a Bor-led rebellion therefore puzzle analysts familiar with this entrenched presence.
For many residents, the immediate concern is stability: safeguarding herds, reopening schools, and restoring normal commerce along the Juba-Bor road. Whether the Red Belt evolves into a partner or a pariah may hinge on how the security apparatus interprets its intent.
Calls for Dialogue and Transparency
Multiple civil-society voices urge an impartial investigation into the Nairobi episode and the competing claims. They contend that convening local chiefs, national security officials and Red Belt representatives could expose manipulation, clarify command structures, and defuse a conflict that risks spiralling beyond Bor County.

