After his family was massacred and home torched, Sudanese farmer Ayoub Haroun sought refuge in a school alongside some of the tens of thousands of people fleeing recent bitter ethnic conflict.
More than a week of bloodshed in July in Sudan’s Blue Nile State left at least 105 people dead and scores wounded as rival groups fought in a complex conflict involving deep-seated grievances, control of land and battles for power.
“The gunfire was constant, all day long every day,” said Haroun, now sheltering in the former school in Blue Nile’s Damazin city.
However, while the violence was the culmination of simmering ethnic tensions — between the Hausa people and other rival groups, including the Barta — it has further emphasized a wider security breakdown since a military coup in October last year led by army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.
Since the coup, pro-democracy demonstrations across the country have been met with a crackdown by security forces that has left at least 116 people dead.
Before unrest erupted in Blue Nile, the western region of Darfur had already seen months of ethnic clashes.
“We were left no option but to defend our lands,” said Al-Jaily Abdalla, from the Hamaj people. “Our homes were burnt to the ground, destruction spread everywhere, and there were multiple deaths.”
Haroun, a Hausa, was left homeless, one of 31,000 people from both sides forced to flee their houses, the UN said.
“My brother and nephew were killed, and my home was burnt along with the homes of the rest of my family,” Haroun said.
Each side blames the other for starting the violence and has accused the government of backing the other.
The clashes triggered angry protests across Sudan, with Hausa people demanding justice for those killed.
Other protests called for “unity” and an “end to tribalism” in the nation.
In late July, senior leaders from rival groups agreed to a ceasefire, but a more permanent peace deal and reconciliation is needed.
Blue Nile, a region awash with guns bordering South Sudan and Ethiopia, is still struggling to rebuild after decades of civil war.
Conflict there raged from the middle of the 1990s to 2005, then erupted again in 2011 as ethnic minority rebels battled then-Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir.
After the ouster of al-Bashir in 2019, rebels including from Blue Nile signed a peace deal, the latest in a string of agreements hoped to put an end to conflict.
Sudanese pro-democracy demonstrators have accused the country’s military leadership and ex-rebel leaders who signed the peace pact in 2020 of exacerbating ethnic tensions in Blue Nile for personal gain.
Authorities have rejected such accusations.
Since the clashes, calls have intensified to suspend the agreement.
“It didn’t bring any peace at all,” said Obeid Abu Shotal, a leader from the Barta, who sees the Hausa people as a non-indigenous group.
However, the conflict today is less about battling the government and more about who has the right to the land.
The Hausa people, prominent in west Africa, began arriving in Blue Nile more than a century ago “in search of grazing lands for their cattle,” according to the International Crisis Group think tank.
Today, about 3 million Sudanese are Hausa, a people with a reputation as skilled farmers.
However, tensions remain with groups who see the land as theirs — and violence erupted when Hausa elders asked civil authorities to manage their own affairs, Hausa leader Abdelaziz al-Nour said.
Some saw that as a means to take the land.
“The land of Blue Nile is a red line for us,” said senior Barta leader Abu Shotal, adding that it “only belongs to original people” of the region.
Calm was restored after a heavy deployment of troops was sent to Damazin, the state capital, and an overnight curfew remains in place.
In the market, some shops are still shuttered, while others show the signs of damage from the fighting.
“The market used to be busy,” said Mohamed Adam, a grocery shop owner. “Now work has been much less and everyone left.”
Haroun, living in a school and mourning his murdered family members, wants just to rebuild his life.
“We just want things to go back to how they were,” he said.
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