Article Search

 Cattle raid kills 47 in Sudan - official
    November 18 2009 at 04:48PM Get IOL on your
mobile at m.iol.co.za

Juba, Sudan - A tribal cattle raid this week left 47 dead in south Sudan, an army spokesman said, the latest in a cycle of fatal clashes between pastoralists.

Armed men from the Mundari ethnic group on Monday launched simultaneous attacks on two villages that belong to the Dinka Aliap tribe, part of the south's largest ethnic group, southern army spokesman Kuol Deim Kuol said on Wednesday.

There has been a sharp increase this year in tribal fighting that has killed almost 2,000 people, adding to tensions at a sensitive period for implementing the 2005 north-south peace deal.

Elections, a key part of the deal, are planned for April but southern officials in areas affected by the tribal fighting have said they think attendance may only be patchy because of insecurity and because thousands are still displaced.
Continues Below ↓





"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 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, he said. Many of the south's communities are armed, a legacy of more than 20 years of north-south war.

Registration for the elections, which the south's leading party has said has been slow and under-funded by Sudan's National Electoral Commission, has already been hindered by tribal fighting this month.

Kuol said the area in Awerial County in the south's Lakes State where the recent fighting took place was remote and it was not clear yet how registration there would be affected. War left the region with very little infrastructure.

The south's leading party has blamed at least some of the inter-tribal fighting on interference by Khartoum, which they say is arming civilians and militias to cause unrest ahead of the elections and a 2011 referendum for southerners on independence.

Others have said the blame should be partly put on rivalry between southern leaders, complicated by the long war that often pitched southern ethnic groups against each other.

Many southerners live in what the United Nations has called a security vacuum, without police and reliant on their armed youth. Some 2 million died in the north-south war exacerbated by religious and political differences between north and south.

  • Reporting by Skye Wheeler

  • Email StoryPrint Story
    BOOKMARK THIS STORY
    Social bookmarking allows users to save and categorise a personal collection of bookmarks and share them with others. This is different to using your own browser bookmarks which are available using the menus within your web browser.

    Use the links below to share this article on the social bookmarking site of your choice.

    Read more about social bookmarking at Wikipedia - Social Bookmarking

    muti



    Watch IOLs latest videos on YouTube Join IOLs Facebook page Follow IOL on Twitter





         Online Services

    Date Your Destiny
     
    I'm a 40 year old woman looking to meet men between the ages of 50 and 60.
     

         More Services

         More Central Africa Stories

         Breaking News      Most Read Stories
          Top News Stories
          Top Africa Stories
          Top Reads - Yesterday



         Entertainment      Motoring
    Autopsy report says Jackson wore a wig
    Angelina Jolie tours Haiti
    Tom Cruise dons mission gear

         Business
    Jobs data reveals SA on the right road
    Forget about rand; schooling key to growth
    Swiss to buy into Adcock division
    FIRST DRIVES: Hyundai's new 'Tucson' and sexy Sonata
    Killer crash bags in fresh recall scandal
    Drivers and cars ill-equipped for when panic strikes
    Classic machines howl at Killarney Historic meeting
    Yamaha, Ducati set pace at Sepang

         Travel
    SA's first liquor-free hotel
    Gateway to love is around the corner
    Explore the real SA for yourself
    Full-body scanners ready to boost security
    Fun on islands in the sun
         Careers
    Changing lanes in the career highway
    Getting to grips with the transport industry
    To be your own boss, believe in yourself first
    Salary survey puts unstable economy into the equation
    Development of child is key