Sudan official says death toll from tribal clashes at 65
The death toll from days of tribal clashes in a southeastern Sudan province climbed to at least 65 people, a senior health official said Sunday.
The fighting between the Hausa and Birta ethnic groups in the Blue Nile province also injured around 150 others, said Gamal Nasser al-Sayed, the province’s health minister.
He told The Associated Press that most of the dead were young men who were shot or stabbed.
Innocent people’ve been driven out of their hometown, there’s no rule of law, armed militias’d like very much to put their hands on the land & resources. Everything’s been reduced to “tribal conflict” with black Hawsa tribe at the receiving end of the violence.#SudanCoup #Sudan pic.twitter.com/lbFCrzjD7U
— Nada Ali (@Nmhali) July 17, 2022
Al-Sayed urged authorities in the capital of Khartoum to help airlift 15 seriously injured as hospitals in the Blue Nile lack advanced equipment and life-saving medicine.
The fighting in the Blue Nile grew out of the killing of a farmer earlier last week and continued through Saturday, according to the local government.
Authorities deployed the military and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) to bring stability to the region. They also imposed a nightly curfew and banned gatherings in the towns of Roseires and Damazin, where the clashes took place.
Local media reported that thousands of people fled their homes since the clashes began last week.
The fighting was the latest tribal violence to hit Sudan, which is in turmoil since the military took over in a coup in October.
The coup upended the country’s short-lived transition to democracy after nearly three decades of repressive rule of autocrat Omar al-Bashir.
Al-Bashir and his Islamist government were removed from power in a popular uprising in April 2019.