#Other countries : The conflict between two tribes this week in the Sudanese state of Blue Nile, bordering Ethiopia, has left 31 dead, according to a new report announced on Saturday by local authorities.
On Friday evening, following the deployment of troops to intervene, Governor Ahmed al-Omda issued an order prohibiting «any gathering or parade» for a month. On Saturday a night curfew was imposed in addition.
Because of these clashes between the Hausa and Barti tribes in the district of Qissan, the hospitals in the area have launched an appeal for blood donation.
A Hausa dignitary told AFP, on condition of anonymity, that the violence erupted because his clan was demanding «the formation of a local civil authority to oversee access to land, which the Bartis refuse».
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On the Barti side, a dignitary who also refused to have his name exposed, said his clan had responded «to a violation of the lands of the Bartis» by the Hausa. «These lands are ours, so if we want to form a local authority, it will be composed only of Bartis and not Hausa»he hammered.
The Qissan region, and more generally the Blue Nile State, has been plagued by a rebellion since 1986. The southern guerrillas have long been a thorn in the side of the dictatorship of Omar el-Bashir, dismissed by the army under pressure from the streets in 2019.
For experts, the security vacuum created by this coup has favored a resurgence of tribal violence in a country where each year hundreds of civilians die in clashes between herders and farmers for access to water or land. .