Sudanese sources said that the Rapid Support Forces pushed about 300 military vehicles to reinforce the armed conflict between the Zureikat and Fallatah tribes in the state of South Darfur, after the killing of twenty people from both tribes.

The Rapid Support Forces stated that the tasks of these forces are to save lives, return funds, catch spoilers and collect weapons at this stage.

On the other hand, a high-ranking Sudanese military source told Al-Jazeera that tribal clashes broke out on Saturday and Sunday in the city of Kassala in eastern Sudan, killing eight people.

According to the same source, the events started last weekend with a limited quarrel that led to the death of a citizen, and later turned into large-scale clashes between the Nuba and Bani Amer clans in separate neighborhoods of the city.

The military source expected that summoning forces from the center to achieve security and stability in Kassala.

In the same context, a medical source in Kassala Hospital confirmed to the island that the number of wounded reached about 21, who were transferred to the city hospital.

Official concern.
The Councils of Sovereignty, Ministers, and the executive and security services in Sudan expressed their concern about these developments.

The President of the Council of Sovereignty, Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, directed the regular forces to confront all those who want to tamper with the security of the citizen with the law and firmness.

In a statement, Al-Burhan called on the citizens to miss the opportunity on what he described as the advocates of sedition who seek to destroy the values ​​of Sudanese society, and to stand by the voice of the revolution.

Yesterday, the acting governor of Kassala state, Mahmoud Bakr Hamed, said that clashes between two tribes in the city of Kassala in eastern Sudan led to the death of three people and 79 wounded.

He added in a statement that the violence between members of the Bani Amer and Nuba groups, which had exploded in the past, re-ignited on Thursday and escalated on Friday when houses were burned.

The two groups reached peace in September 2019 after General Mohammed Hamdan Diqlo, known as Hamidati, threatened to expel the two tribes from the country if they did not commit to reconciliation.