52 killed in clashes in the disputed oil-rich Africa
The motive for the attack Saturday evening was not immediately clear, but it was suspected to revolve around a land dispute
AP
ABYEI, 29 JAN
Gunmen attacked villagers in the oil-rich region of Abyei
claimed by both Sudan and South Sudan, leaving at least 52 people dead,
including a UN peacekeeper, and 64 wounded, a regional official said Sunday.
The motive for the attack Saturday evening was not
immediately clear, but it was suspected to revolve around a land dispute, Bulis
Koch, Abyei information minister, told The Associated Press in a telephone
interview from Abyei.
Deadly ethnic violence has been common in the region, where
Twic Dinka tribal members from neighbouring Warrap State are locked in a land
dispute with Ngok Dinka from Abyei over the Aneet area, located at the border.
The attackers in Saturday’s violence were armed youths from
the Nuer tribe who migrated to Warrap state last year because of flooding in
their areas, Koch said. In a statement, the United Nations Interim Security
Force for Abyei (UNISFA) condemned the violence that killed the peacekeepers.
UNIFSA confirmed intercommoned clashes took place in the
Nyinkuac, Majbong and Khadian areas, leading to casualties and the evacuation
of civilians to UNISFA bases. “The UNISFA base in Agok came under attack by an
armed group. The mission repelled the attack, but tragically a Ghanaian
peacekeeper was killed,” the statement said.
Sudan and South Sudan have disagreed over control of the
Abyei region since a 2005 peace deal ended decades of civil war between Sudan’s
north and south. Both Sudan and South Sudan claim ownership of Abyei, whose
status was unresolved after South Sudan became independent of Sudan in 2011.
The region’s majority Ngok Dinka people favor South Sudan,
while the Misseriya nomads who come to Abyei to find pasture for their cattle
favor Sudan. Currently, the region is under the control of South Sudan. AP
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