Under a north-south peace deal signed in January 2005 that ended Africa's longest civil war, separate north and south Sudan armies were created. Both agreed to reduce their troop counts.
Head of south Sudan's disarmament, demobilisation and reintegration (DDR) commission Arop Moyak Monytoc, said they had been relying on the United Nations to provide packages including seeds and tools to help soldiers reintegrate into society.
"The serious issue is reintegration. What is going to be their livelihood?" said Monytoc.
The soldiers to be demobilised cost the semi-autonomous southern government $5-million a month in salaries.
In June, the southern Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) integrated 31 000 former militia members which analysts said strained the army's budget.
The SPLA currently has some 170 000 soldiers, an army official said. To date, only children had been demobilised from the SPLA.
Monytoc said registration of the soldiers to be demobilised would begin whether or not the UN DDR body, which had promised support packages, is ready to assist, but he criticised them for being too slow.
"We are starting without them," said Monytoc. "They can join us when they're ready... They are too slow, too much bureaucracy, everything must go to New York."
A senior UN official in south Sudan declined to comment.
Monytoc said it was still unclear what the minimum demobilization package would be for the demobilized soldiers, as the commission had been relying on the U.N. packages.
SPLA spokesman Kuol Diem Kuol said the extra soldiers were blocking modernisation of the army.
"Instead of buying equipment to make us a modern army we are paying these soldiers," he said.
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