At least 83 killed in fighting in Sudan's Darfur
Over 80 people have been killed in two days of
ongoing clashes in Sudan's restive Darfur, doctors said Sunday, just over two
weeks since a long-running peacekeeping mission ended operations.
The violence is the most significant fighting
reported since the signing of a peace agreement in October hoped to end years
of war in the vast western region, that has left Darfur awash with weapons.
The violence has reportedly pitted non-Arab and Arab
tribes in El Geneina, the capital of West Darfur state.
It was reported to have initially started as a local
dispute, before quickly morphing into broader fighting involving armed
militias.
"The death toll from the bloody events that
occurred in El Geneina, the capital of West Darfur State, has risen since
Saturday morning ... to 83 dead, and 160 wounded including from the armed
forces," the Central Committee of Sudan Doctors said.
Sudanese authorities have imposed a state-wide
curfew in West Darfur, while the Khartoum government dispatched a
"high-profile" delegation to help contain the situation.
Citing the doctors' union, the state-run SUNA news
agency said that casualties are expected to increase as the fighting continues.
The union's local branch also "called for the
securing of health facilities" and urged transport be made available for
medics to assist the wounded.
On Sunday, the head of Sudan's ruling body, army
chief General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, met top security chiefs to discuss the
violence.
The Sudanese Professionals Association, an umbrella
group which spearheaded protests against ousted president Omar al-Bashir, said
the violence hit camps for internally displaced people.
"Parts of Kerindig camp were burned, and
sustained significant damages forcing people to leave for safe areas," it
said in a statement.
"These events showed that the spread of weapons
across Sudan, and especially in Darfur, are the main reasons for the deteriorating
situation."
On December 31, the hybrid United Nations African
Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) formally ended its operations in the region,
13 years after it came into being.
It plans a phased withdrawal of its approximately
8,000 armed and civilian personnel inside six months.
The Sudanese government "will take over
responsibility for the protection of civilians" in Darfur, UNAMID said, as
its mandate ended.
Fearing deadly violence, Darfur residents held protests
in late December against UNAMID's departure.
Also in late December, clashes in South Darfur state
left at least 15 people dead and dozens wounded, prompting the government to
send troops to the area.
Darfur was the scene of a bitter conflict that
erupted in 2003, leaving around 300,000 people dead and 2.5 million displaced,
the United Nations says.
The fighting erupted when ethnic minority rebels
rose up against the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum, which responded by
recruiting and arming a notorious Arab-dominated militia known as the
Janjaweed.
The main conflict has subsided over the years but
ethnic and tribal clashes still flare periodically, largely pitting nomadic
Arab pastoralists against settled farmers from non-Arab ethnic groups.
The violence often centres on land ownership and
access to water.
Sudan is undergoing a rocky political transitional
after Bashir's April 2019 ouster.
Bashir, who is currently in custody in Khartoum, is
wanted by the International Criminal Court for alleged genocide and war crimes
in Darfur perpetrated more than a decade ago.
The transitional government, a power sharing
arrangement comprised of generals and civilian figures, signed in October a
peace agreement with rebel groups in Sudan's main conflict zones, including
Darfur.
But two rebel groups refused to join a recent peace
deal, including the Sudan Liberation Movement (SLM) faction led by Abdelwahid
Nour, which is believed to maintain considerable support in Darfur.
The Sudanese Professionals Association said the
violence in West Darfur shows the "deficiencies" of the peace deal.
The deal, it added, "strayed away from
addressing the roots of the crisis in Darfur, and the issues of people who
suffered the scourge of war, and the spread of weapons".



