Maura Metbeni Paul Ajak (born 1989) is an investigative South Sudanese journalist, broadcaster and camerawoman.
She started being a journalist in 2014 when she joined the Catholic Radio Network. Born and raised in South Sudan, a country recovering from years of devastations caused by civil wars and ranked 144th out of 180 countries on the World Press Freedom Index (ref:2018), Ajak is internationally known for her courageous freelance investigative stories uncovering human rights violations, corruption and the environmental impacts of climate change and the conducts of oil companies in the country which sees ordinary people finding themselves drinking water mixed with oil. In May 2017, her employer, the Catholic Radio Network, scooped an anti- corruption award and Ajak was awarded a certificate of recognition at the event as one of the two best journalists holding the South Sudanese government accountable.
In September 2018, several soldiers belonging to the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA) were sentenced for rape and murder by the country's military court after Ajak exposed them. The court ordered the South Sudanese government to pay each of the rape victims - some of whom were as young as 11-years of age - an amount of $4,000.
In 2018, while covering the detention of an Al Jazeera reporter, Maura and colleagues were threatened and had equipment confiscated by security agents in parliament. South Sudan ranked 144th out of 180 on Reporters Without Bordersâ World Press Freedom Index during her early career.