Antelope Valley Press

Sudan’s leader visits Darfur

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CAIRO (AP) — Sudan’s leader visited West Darfur province Monday following tribal violence earlier this month that killed at least 144 people, posing a challenge to the country’s fragile democratic transition.

Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan, head of the ruling sovereign council, met separately with representa­tives of the non-Arab Masalit and the Arab Rizeigat tribes in Genena, the provincial capital of West Darfur, the sovereign council said.

Burhan, who travelled to West Darfur along with top security and military officials, vowed to take “decisive decisions” to foster security and stability in the province, the council said without elaboratin­g.

The latest bout of fighting grew out of a shooting April 3 that killed two people from the Masalit tribe in a camp for displaced people in Genena. Over the past week, fighting ensued for around a week between the Rizeigat and the Masalit tribes.

Authoritie­s declared a state of emergency in West Darfur and deployed more troops to contain the violence. West Darfur’s governor, Mohamed Abdullah al-Doma, on Thursday criticized the central government in Khartoum for not heeding his calls for reinforcem­ents.

The clashes killed at least 144 people and wounded more than 230, according to the Sudanese doctors’ committee in West Darfur.

The violence poses a challenge to efforts by Sudan’s transition­al government to end decades-long rebellions in areas like Darfur, where conflict often falls along ethnic lines.

Sudan is on a fragile path to democracy after a popular uprising led the military to overthrow longtime autocratic President Omar al-Bashir in April 2019. A military-civilian government now rules the country.

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