KHARTOUM,
Sudan
A new round of violence in Sudan's Darfur region has killed more than 60 people, the United Nations said on Sunday, as the country's prime minister promised fresh troops for the conflict-stricken region.
The UN Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs in Sudan (OCHA) said about 500 armed men on Saturday
attacked the village of Masteri, located 48km (30 miles) south of Geneina, the capital of West Darfur
province.
The latest clashes between the
Masalit and other Arab tribes in the area started on Saturday and lasted until
late Sunday, state-run SUNA news agency reported, citing unnamed sources.
The SUNA report did not provide a
death toll, but said dozens of people were killed or wounded, and more than 60
injured were taken by helicopter to Geneina for treatment.
Local authorities asked for
military reinforcements to halt the clashes, the report said.
On Sunday, Prime Minister Abdalla
Hamdok said the government would send security forces to conflict-stricken
Darfur to "protect citizens and the farming season".
The force will
include army and police, he said in a statement after he met a delegation of
women from the region.
An unconfirmed number of houses
were looted and burned in the village, along with half the local market, OCHA
said. The village borders Chad.
The attack prompted about 500
people to start a protest camp in front of the Masalit Sultan House, a
settlement hosting about 4,200 internally displaced people in Masteri, the UN
agency said.
The protesters called for the
authorities to protect them from attacks.
Saturday's attack was the latest in
a series of attacks in the area. OCHA documented at least seven between July 19
and 26, which killed or wounded dozens.
Last week, local authorities in
West Darfur declared a 24-hour curfew in Geneina,
compromising access to nutrition, water and sanitation, education, health and
other critical services, OCHA said.
The clashes came in the middle of
the agricultural season, increasing humanitarian needs in the region.
About 2.8 million people in the Darfur region are estimated to be severely food insecure between June and September, more than 545,000 of them in West Darfur alone, OCHA said.
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