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Nine USAID Relief Workers Killed in Sudan
October 26, 2003 ``We are concerned about the situation there,'' Natsios said. Earlier, Sualif el-Deen Salih, the head of Sudan's governmental Humanitarian Aid Agency, which supervises all nongovernment and international organizations, acknowledged for the first time the seriousness of the situation in Darfur. Recent tribal clashes there killed more than 100 people and scattered thousands of people from 15 villages into the wilderness fearing for their lives, press reports in Khartoum said last week. Darfur, on the border with Chad, is home to some 80 tribes and ethnic groups divided between nomads of Arab origin and farmers of African origin. Nearly a fifth of Sudan's 30 million people live in the region, one of the country's least developed, where cycles of drought and desert creep have shrunk its vast grazing areas and spurred friction among nomads and farmers. The situation worsened earlier this year when a Darfur group demanding self-determination for the region attacked Sudanese government troops. Last month, the government and the Darfur Liberation Army agreed to a 45-day cease-fire.
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