DAMAZIN, Sudan
At least 150 people have been killed in two days of fighting in the latest ethnic clashes triggered by land disputes in Sudan's southern Blue Nile state, a medic said Thursday.
The fighting is some of the
worst in recent months, and crowds took to the streets of the Blue Nile state
capital Damazin in protest, chanting slogans condemning a conflict that has
left hundreds dead this year.
Clashes in Sudan's troubled
Blue Nile broke out last week after reported arguments over land between
members of the Hausa people and rival groups.
The fighting has centred
around the Wad al-Mahi area near Roseires, some 500 kilometres (310 miles)
south of the capital Khartoum. Residents on Wednesday reported intense gunfire
and houses set on fire.
"A total 150 people
including women, children, and elderly were killed between Wednesday and
Thursday," said Abbas Moussa, head of Wad al-Mahi hospital. "Around
86 people were also wounded in the violence."
On Thursday, hundreds marched
through Damazin, some calling for the state governor to be sacked, witnesses
said.
"No, no to violence," the demonstrators chanted.
The UN mission in Sudan said
it was "alarmed" by the "resurgence of conflict" in Blue
Nile, a region awash with guns bordering South Sudan and Ethiopia, that is
still struggling to rebuild after decades of civil war.
Sudan is grappling with
deepening political unrest and a spiralling economic crisis since last year's
military coup, led by army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.
The military power grab
upended a transition to civilian rule launched after the 2019 ouster of
strongman Omar al-Bashir, who ruled for three decades.
"Sustainable peace won't
be possible without a fully functional credible government that prioritises
local communities' needs including security, and addresses the root causes of
conflict", the UN added.
A surge in ethnic violence in
recent months has highlighted the security breakdown in Sudan since the coup.
Over 546 people have been
killed and more than 211,000 forced to flee their homes in inter-communal
conflicts across the country from January to September, according to the UN.
Last week, clashes in the same
area of Blue Nile sparked by "a dispute over land issues" left at
least 13 people dead and 24 injured, according to the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Authorities imposed an
overnight curfew in a bid to contain the violence.
Fighting between the Hausa
people and other groups first broke out in July, with some 149 dead and 124
wounded recorded up until early October, according to a toll reported by OCHA.
The July clashes erupted after
Hausa members requested the creation of a "civil authority", that
rival groups saw as a means of gaining access to land.
The clashes also triggered
angry protests across Sudan, with the Hausa people demanding justice for those
killed.
By late July, senior leaders
agreed to cease hostilities. Clashes broke out again in September.
In a separate conflict,
violence broke out earlier this week around Lagawa in West Kordofan between the
Nuba and Arab Misseriya groups, also in the south of Sudan, some 580 kilometres
(360 miles) southwest of Khartoum.
The government's Humanitarian
Aid Commission reported 19 dead and 34 injured in that conflict, according to
the UN, with 36,500 people fleeing the violence.
The army accused a holdout
rebel group of shelling Lagawa on Tuesday, wounding two members of the
paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
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