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News ID: 104786
Publish Date : 16 July 2022 - 21:50

Sudan: 31 Killed in Tribal Clashes in Blue Nile Province

CAIRO (AFP/AP) – At least 31 people were killed in tribal clashes that fired up again on Saturday in a Sudanese southern province, authorities said, the latest bloodshed in a country in turmoil since an October military coup.
The fighting between the Hausa and Birta ethnic groups in the Blue Nile province grew out of the killing of a farmer earlier this week, according to a statement from the local government late Friday.
The clashes continued Saturday afternoon despite the deployment of more troops in the region, according to the Sudan’s Doctors Committee, which tracks violence across the country.
The local government deployed the military and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces — or RSF — to bring stability to the region. Authorities also imposed a nightly curfew and banned gatherings in the area where the clashes took place.
The clashes also left at least 39 people injured and damaged some 16 shops in the town of Roseires, the local government said.
The medical group said more injured were brought to hospitals Saturday, amid a shortage of emergency and life-saving medicine in the province. It called authorities in the capital of Khartoum to help evacuate injured people for advanced treatment.
The violence came amid chaos in Sudan since the military’s took over in October, removing a transitional government that ruled the country since a popular uprising forced the overthrow of longtime autocrat Omar al-Bashir in April 2019.
The coup upended the country’s transition to democracy and raised questions about military leaders’ ability to bring security to Sudan’s far-reaching areas. In April, tribal clashes killed over 200 people in war-wrecked Darfur.
The Blue Nile state, bordering Ethiopia south of the country, has long seen conflict between the government and rebel groups.
Several peace deals since 2020 have brought violence down but experts say the military coup in 2021 has created a security vacuum that has fostered a resurgence in tribal violence.