Scores die in South Sudan clashes

19/11/2009| IslamWeb

At least 47 people have been killed in tribal clashes that followed an attempted cattle raid in South Sudan.

Armed men from the Mundari ethnic group launched attacks on Monday on two villages that belong to the Dinka Aliap tribe, part of the south's largest ethnic group, an army spokesman said on Wednesday.
"On the side of the Dinka 10 were killed and 16 wounded. From the side of the Mundari 37 bodies were found on the ground," Kuol Deim Kuol, a southern army spokesman, said.
"They [the Mundari] did not manage to take any cattle."
The two groups have a long and bloody history of tit-for-tat cattle raiding.
Lise Grande, the UN humanitarian coordinator for South Sudan, said that she was hearing reports that up to 10,000 people could have been displaced by the latest violence.
"This particular raid comes on top of five other raids, the most recent in September. In that raid about 5,000 people were displaced and at least 10 were killed," she told Al Jazeera.
"What you have is a spiraling attack and counter-attack, this being the most recent unfortunate incident."
Rising violence
The sharp rise in tribal violence in recent months has killed more than 2,000 people, including many women and children, and displaced another 250,000 people, the United Nations has said.
The website of the UN-funded Miraya FM radio station confirmed Monday's incident, reporting that it disrupted voter registration for national and presidential elections due to be held in April next year.
The process, which the south's leading party has said has been slow and underfunded by Sudan's National Electoral Commission, has already been hindered by tribal fighting this month.
PHOTO CAPTION
South Sudanese cattle herders from the Dinka ethnic group dance while watching wrestling in Bor, Jonglei State, in 2008.
Al-Jazeera

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