Darfur: 138 dead in three weeks of Sudanese tribal conflict

At least 138 people have been killed in inter-tribal clashes in Darfur, doctors said on Thursday, adding that many could have been saved if there had been better access to health services in this vast area of ​​Sudan, which is inaccessible to healthcare workers.

In three weeks, two series of deadly episodes broke out in Darfur.

The region was torn apart by an extremely bloody war during the rule of dictator Omar al-Bashir. Since 2003, the conflict has left at least 300,000 dead and more than 2.5 million internally displaced persons and refugees, according to the UN.

The first series of incidents broke out on November 17, between breeders who were accused of stealing camels in the Jabal Moon mountain area of ​​West Darfur. The second erupted on Saturday, due to another dispute that led to a battle with automatic weapons in the Krink area of ​​West Darfur.

In all, the episodes, according to the latest report from the West Darfur Medical Association, caused “138 deaths and 106 injuries”, of which “25 deaths on Wednesday in Jabal Moon alone”. The United Nations says 22,000 people have been displaced, with more than 2,000 fleeing to neighboring Chad.

“Many of the injured died because it was impossible to reach a medical facility in time and because the rural clinics in the area did not have the necessary equipment to save them,” the local medical association said.

For weeks, the UN has not stopped sounding the alarm about the damage caused by seasonal conflicts on land, access to water and other resources, destroying homes, fields and crops in an area where humanitarian access is already “limited”.

Many residents are in need of “food, water, shelter and health services,” the UN said recently.

And this in a country where, according to the United Nations, in 2022 30% of the population will need humanitarian aid, first of all the 2.9 million internally displaced, who are almost all in Darfur.

In West Darfur alone, the UN said it had recorded “more than 200 violent incidents” in 2021, while recent episodes elsewhere in Darfur recorded “village devastation”, “sexual violence” and “cattle theft”.

SOURCE: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ

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Source From: Capital

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