At least 25 people have been killed in South Sudan on Tuesday, October 11, after youths from two neighbouring communities in the country's north clashed over a disputed borderline separating their areas.
Violence is part of daily life in parts of South Sudan where clashes triggered by localised disputes over grazing areas, water, cultivation grounds and other resources.
In the latest unrest, armed youths from the Twic community in Warrap state on the border with Sudan attacked residents of neighbouring Abyei town also on the border.
An additional 12 people were killed among the Abyei residents including two women and a child, Deng Ajak, a local administration official said, Reuters reports.
Both sides disagreed over where the borderline separating the two communities lies, with each claiming the other is encroaching on their land, both officials said.
"The situation is worrisome ... It is very tense. There is too much hatred between these two sisterly communities," Ariech said, warning that the violence may escalate if the dispute is not resolved.
The episode is the latest deadly clash between the two communities over the same land.
Back in February, armed youths from Twic launched attacks on Abyei residents and several people were killed, others displaced and houses burnt.
South Sudan erupted into civil war shortly after declaring independence from Sudan in 2011, which pitted President Salva Kiir and his Dinka ethnic allies against his Vice President Riek Machar and his Nuer tribe.
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