The death toll following an outbreak of violence in the region of Darfur in Sudan reached 48, a doctors’ union and an aid worker said on Sunday as sporadic violence continued. Women and children were among the dead.
The deadly clashes erupted after a fistfight between two residents in a camp for displaced persons in Genena with a man from the Arab Rizeigat tribe being stabbed to death.
Family members carried out retribution on the Krinding camp and other areas on Saturday.
Another attack against the Abu Zar camp was reported on Sunday morning.
A further 97 people were injured in the attacks. The doctors’ union believed that the death toll would continue to rise.
They also “called for the securing of health facilities” and access to transport to help medics assist those who were injured.
Sudan undergoes a shift in power
The violence occurred just weeks after the UN Security Council announced the withdrawal of a joint UN-African Union peacekeeping mission from the region.
The departure comes 13 years after the mission was established and locals protested the move fearing further violence in the absence of international security personnel.
Sudan has been pursuing a path towards democracy following the ousting of the longtime autocratic president, Omar al-Bashir, by a popular uprising.
Authorities in the region imposed a curfew on Saturday, closing all markets and public gatherings.
The central government in Khartoum also dispatched a delegation of high-ranking officials including the country’s top prosecutor to try and bring order to the region.
The recent hostilities have brought into question the transitional government’s ability to stabilize the conflict-ridden Darfur region.
New government seeks to end the on-going conflict
A large-scale ethnic conflict in 2003 left some 300,000 people dead and 2.5 million displaced. Despite an easing of tensions since then, sporadic outbreaks of violence have continued.
A major source of conflicts in the region has been to do with access to land and water.
A power sharing agreement set up by the transitional government aims to include local rebel groups in the hope of bringing peace and stability, but two major groups including the popular Sudan Liberation Movement have refused to join.