Deadly clashes erupt at peace-keeping facilities in Sudan's Darfur
Clashes between military forces and armed groups at the facilities of a former international peace-keeping mission in Sudan's Darfur region left an unknown number of people dead and injured on Saturday, a military statement said.
Witnesses told Reuters they had heard heavy gunfire on Saturday around the perimeter of the headquarters of the former African Union-United Nations peace-keeping mission UNAMID in El Fasher, North Darfur, but said the number of casualties was unclear.
Sudan's top general is playing a careful game to ensure that at the end of the day the military coup will be a 'fait accompli'. @ComradeJihad unpacks ️⬇️ https://t.co/xDYlZpglv0
— The New Arab (@The_NewArab) February 5, 2022
There has been a surge in violence and displacement in Darfur since 2020 that analysts have linked to factions jostling for power around a peace deal signed with some former rebel groups that year, and UNAMID's ceasing operations at the start of 2021.
Sudan's military leaders said on Wednesday the groups that signed the deal would have to leave cities in Darfur following looting and attacks that led the U.N.'s World Food Programme to temporarily suspend its operations in the region.
The UNAMID peace-keepers were meant to be replaced by a national joint force that is yet to be deployed. Former UNAMID facilities have been repeatedly attacked and looted.
Conflict that escalated in Darfur from 2003 killed an estimated 300,000 people, as government forces and allied militias sought to crush a rebellion. Some 2.5 million people live in displacement camps in Darfur.
(Reuters)