Sudan Official: Death Toll from Days of Tribal Clashes at 79

Scores of Hausa people gather outside local government offices in Port Sudan, on the Red Sea, on July 19, 2022 to demand justice for comrades killed in a deadly land dispute with a rival ethnic group in the country's south. (AFP)
Scores of Hausa people gather outside local government offices in Port Sudan, on the Red Sea, on July 19, 2022 to demand justice for comrades killed in a deadly land dispute with a rival ethnic group in the country's south. (AFP)
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Sudan Official: Death Toll from Days of Tribal Clashes at 79

Scores of Hausa people gather outside local government offices in Port Sudan, on the Red Sea, on July 19, 2022 to demand justice for comrades killed in a deadly land dispute with a rival ethnic group in the country's south. (AFP)
Scores of Hausa people gather outside local government offices in Port Sudan, on the Red Sea, on July 19, 2022 to demand justice for comrades killed in a deadly land dispute with a rival ethnic group in the country's south. (AFP)

Days of tribal clashes in a southern province in Sudan have killed at least 79 people, a senior Sudanese official said Tuesday as violent protests erupted in two nearby provinces in the East African nation.

The clashes between the Hausa and Birta ethnic groups in the Blue Nile province grew out of a killing of a farmer last week. The violence has also injured around 200 people, according to Gamal Nasser al-Sayed, the province’s health minister.

The minister appealed to the United Nations and global aid agencies to step up medical and humanitarian assistance to help those who were forced to flee their homes because of the fighting.

"Thousands, mostly women and children, are now living in schools and in the open," said al-Sayed, speaking over the phone. "They need help, they need food, they need healthcare."

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the tribal violence has displaced about 15,500 people, who are now mostly sheltering in schools in the town of Damazin.

Earlier this week, authorities deployed the military and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces in efforts to stabilize the region. They also imposed a nightly curfew and banned gatherings in the towns of Roseires and Damazin, where the clashes took place.

The violence in Blue Nile triggered violent demonstrations in the neighboring province of Sennar and the nearby Kassala province. Thousands, mostly from the Hausa, took to the streets over the past two days to protest the government’s lack of response to the clashes.

Local media reported that at least three people were killed in protests in Kassala on Monday, and that angry protesters burned government buildings there. Local authorities banned all gatherings in the provincial capital, the city of Kassala.

The clashes were the latest tribal violence to hit Sudan, which is in turmoil since the military took over in a coup last October. The coup removed a civilian-led and Western backed government, upending the country’s short-lived transition to democracy after nearly three decades of rule of president Omar al-Bashir.

A popular uprising forced the removal of Bashir and his government in April 2019.



Moroccan Authorities Stop Migration Attempt into Spanish Enclave of Ceuta

Members of Morocco's police arrest a man as they deploy to prevent illegal crossings of the land border fence with Spain's African enclave of Ceuta near Fnideq in northern Morocco on September 15, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
Members of Morocco's police arrest a man as they deploy to prevent illegal crossings of the land border fence with Spain's African enclave of Ceuta near Fnideq in northern Morocco on September 15, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
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Moroccan Authorities Stop Migration Attempt into Spanish Enclave of Ceuta

Members of Morocco's police arrest a man as they deploy to prevent illegal crossings of the land border fence with Spain's African enclave of Ceuta near Fnideq in northern Morocco on September 15, 2024. (Photo by AFP)
Members of Morocco's police arrest a man as they deploy to prevent illegal crossings of the land border fence with Spain's African enclave of Ceuta near Fnideq in northern Morocco on September 15, 2024. (Photo by AFP)

Moroccan security forces stopped groups of people who sought to force their way across the border into Spain’s North African enclave of Ceuta following a call on social networks for a mass migration attempt, authorities said.
Some attempted to breach a border fence that has long been a flashpoint for sporadic migration tensions, but none successfully made it into Spain, the Spanish Interior Ministry said Monday. It said Spanish and Moroccan security efforts over recent days ″allowed the situation to be brought under control."
Online messages in recent days had called for people to head for Ceuta on Sunday to cross the border into Europe. Videos posted by local networks showed groups of people in the hills around the Moroccan border town of Fnideq, and a heightened Moroccan security presence, including helicopters.
Moroccan authorities also arrested 60 people suspected of inciting a mass migration attempt on social networks, Moroccan intelligence agency DGSN said in a Facebook post.