Three Ethiopian Peacekeepers Killed in Darfur Attack

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Three Ethiopian peacekeepers were killed Thursday in an attack in Sudan's troubled Darfur region, the joint U.N.-African Union mission said, the latest deaths in increasingly dangerous peace operations in Africa.

They were guarding a well in Karma, North Darfur state, when they were attacked by gunmen, who fled afterwards, the United Nations-African Union Mission in Darfur said.

Two of them were killed in the attack and the third, gravely wounded, died later.

UNAMID was deployed in late 2007 to help end bloodshed among militias, rebel forces and gangs in Darfur.

In New York, UN chief Ban Ki-moon said "this has been a bloody October for U.N. peacekeeping.

"In Darfur, Mali and the Central African Republic, we have lost 14 peacekeepers in hostile acts -- nearly one per day."

A wave of attacks in northern Mali has killed 31 peacekeepers since July 2013, while a Pakistani serving in the Central African Republic was killed in an ambush last week.

Ten U.N. peacekeepers have been injured in Bangui since Friday in attacks on their patrols.

"Blue helmets must be allowed to undertake their life-saving work without interference," Ban told reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York.

The U.N.'s 130,000 troops, police and civilian staff serving in missions worldwide are being drawn into more complex conflicts while being tasked with enforcing fragile peace deals.

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