Cattle are a central part of the lives of many communities in South Sudan
The
United Nations is sending troop reinforcements to the South Sudanese
town of Pibor to prevent an attack by members of the Lou Nuer ethnic
group.
Tens of thousands of people from the rival Murle group fled the town on Friday morning, fearing violence.Inter-ethnic clashes in Jonglei state, initially triggered by cattle raids, have cost the lives of around 1,000 people in recent months.
The UN already has a battalion of troops in Pibor.
Most victims of the clashes have been women and children. Both communities have abducted children during the violence.
Correspondents say these attacks are one of the biggest challenges to the stability of South Sudan, the world's newest country, which only became an independent nation in July.
It is one of the world's poorest regions, inhabited by around 200 ethnic groups, each with its own languages and traditional beliefs.
About 6,000 armed men from the Lou Nuer community are marching through Jonglei state burning homes and seizing cattle along the way, says BBC East Africa correspondent Will Ross.
Earlier this week the entire town
of Lukangol was burnt to the ground by the Lou Nuer fighters. Around
20,000 civilians managed to flee the town before the attack, but dozens
were killed on both sides.
The United Nations humanitarian co-ordinator in South Sudan,
Lise Grande, told the BBC that the UN was reinforcing its troops in
Pibor to assist the South Sudanese army in defending civilians."We are very concerned by the scale of this," she said.
"The UN is facing enormous logistical challenges - we still have no military aircraft, only civilian helicopters," she added.
South Sudan Vice-President Riek Machar has been shuttling between the rival communities in a push for peace. On Thursday night it seemed he had persuaded the Lou Nuer not to attack Pibor - but they then left in their thousands overnight heading towards that town.
Cattle plays a central role in the life of many South Sudanese communities - in the absence of banks, they are used to store wealth and to pay bride prices.
The violence between the two communities has been going on for years, but with modern weapons its scale is increasing.
Our correspondent says the clashes may have begun as cattle raids, but they have spiralled out of control into retaliatory attacks.
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