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Africa North
Chad warns could retaliate if Sudan attacks
2025-03-25
[EWN.CO.ZA] Chad on Monday warned its traditional foe Sudan
...a Moslem country located in the Horn of Africa. It is noted for its affinity for rule by ex- or current generals, its holy men, and for the oppression of the native Afro population by its Arab conquerors. South Sudan, populated mostly by the natives, split off from Sudan proper, which left North and South Darfur to be oppressed by the guys with turbans...
that it "reserves the legitimate right to respond" if attacked, following threats made by a senior Khartoum military official.

In a video broadcast Sunday on Al Jazeera, the deputy commander of the Sudanese forces, Yasser al-Atta, warned that the airport in the Chadian capital N'Djamena and at Amdjarras in northeastern Chad "are legitimate targets for the Sudanese armed forces".

The remarks "could be interpreted as a declaration of war if followed through," Chadian foreign ministry front man Ibrahim Adam Mahamat said.

"Such rhetoric could lead to a dangerous escalation for the entire sub-region," and "Chad reserves the legitimate right to respond vigorously to any attempted aggression," he added.

"Sudan has just declared war on Chad," declared former Chadian prime minister Saleh Kebzabo on his official Facebook page.

"We must take this very seriously, prepare for it militarily, and mobilise," he added.

Chad has accused the Sudanese government for over six decades of doing everything it can to destabilise its neighbour, notably by "orchestrating rebellions" and supporting the Boko Haram
... not to be confused with Procol Harum, Harum Scarum, possibly to be confused with Helter Skelter. The Nigerian version of al-Qaeda and the Taliban rolled together and flavored with a smigeon of distinctly Subsaharan ignorance and brutality...
Islamist group.

Since April 2023, Sudan has been torn apart by a conflict pitting General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, head of the army and de facto ruler of the country since a 2021 coup, against his former deputy, Mohammed Hamdan Daglo, known as Hemedti, the chief of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

At the end of October 2024, N'Djamena denied any involvement in the Sudanese conflict but Khartoum's de facto rulers accused it of playing an active role in arms deliveries from the United Arab Emirates to the RSF.

The alleged support for the RSF has been highlighted in various reports -- including one from the United Nations
...a lucrative dumping ground for the relatives of dictators and party hacks...
in January 2024 -- but Chad and the UAE have consistently denied involvement.

The presence in El Fasher in Sudan's perennially restive Darfur region of a Zaghawa rebellion -— an ethnic group also present in Chad -— is N'Djamena's main concern.

It is led by Ousman Dillo, the younger brother of Chadian opposition leader Yaya Dillo Djerou who was killed by the Chadian army.

In February 2008, a Zaghawa rebellion based in Sudan launched a lightning offensive in Chad alongside other groups, forcing former president Idriss Deby Itno to take refuge in his presidential palace, before successfully repelling the rebels with decisive support from former ruler La Belle France.

The war in Sudan since April 2023 has left tens of thousands dead, displaced more than 11 million people and created the risk of widespread famine, in what the UN considers the worst humanitarian crisis in recent times.
Related:
Chad: 2025-03-22 Ex-Haiti envoy slams 'deeply flawed' approach of Biden admin
Chad: 2025-03-13 Judge blocks Trump admin from targeting Democratic law firm after attorneys warn of firm's demise
Chad: 2025-03-11 Massive ICE operation nabs nearly 650 illegal aliens in Texas, over 80% with criminal charges or convictions
Link


Africa North
'We Will Have to Fight.' Will Russia Seize the Chance to Get Even with the West?
2025-01-17
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.
by Victor Vasiliev

[REGNUM] One of the main newsmakers of the beginning of 2025 in Africa has become the Republic of Chad. Its young leader Mahamat Deby, who visited Moscow a year ago, gives tough ultimatums to the French military, becomes the target of an armed attack and wins the elections.

On January 8, shots rang out near the presidential palace in N'Djamena, the capital of Chad. Rumors began to circulate about an attempted coup and an attack by Boko Haram terrorists. But everything turned out well.

And already on January 12, Mahamat Deby's Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS) won 124 of the 188 seats in the National Assembly of Chad following the parliamentary elections. The vote, which also included municipal and regional elections, was the first in Chad in more than a decade. The previous parliamentary elections were held in the country in 2011.

It's funny that since 2015, the European Union has allocated considerable funds for holding parliamentary elections, or rather, for equipping the work of the electoral commission, conducting the population census and much more. Including France.

And now, finally, the elections took place. But without any real opposition, largely with French money - under the noise of anti-French statements and against the backdrop of the humiliating withdrawal of French troops from Chad. Africa knows how to give what is deserved.

REVENGE ON MACRON
Macron, like Biden, has not been interested in competence, but in saying the fashionable thing. There are consequences for that.
Chadian President Mahamat Déby is not just positioning himself as the successor to the “great cause” of his father, Idriss Déby, who was killed by terrorists in 2021. Déby is so ambitious that he has already surpassed his father in some ways. In particular, he received the highest military rank of marshal at the age of 40.

While Deby Sr. received and held his marshal title for 31 years largely thanks to the French military presence in the region, Deby Jr. asked the French to “get out” soon after his legitimization following last year’s presidential elections.

Deby Jr. wrote an autobiography, not devoid of literary talent, “From Bedouin to President,” and in April 2024 he presented it to Vladimir Putin, whom he had visited in Moscow earlier that year. And this alone can be considered, if not a revolution, then a real rebellion against the French. Albeit symbolic: the son of a bloody pro-French dictator came to his senses and moved toward rapprochement with Russia, which in the case of Africa means the path to real sovereignty.

The decision to withdraw French armed forces from Chad by January 31, 2025 was also a symbolic humiliation for Paris. The loss of positions in Africa makes French President Emmanuel Macron noticeably nervous.

He recently said that African countries are ungrateful to France for its help in the fight against jihadism. He also explained that France did the right thing by deploying its troops in the Sahel region, but the region did not even say "thank you." And in general, there would be no talk of any sovereignty of the Sahel states today if it were not for France and its armed intervention against jihadists.

The statements have sparked a wave of anger across Africa.

Chad's president said Macron's comments were disrespectful to Africa. Deby accused Macron of being "stuck in the colonial era" and reiterated that France had until the end of January to withdraw its troops.

In his New Year's address to the nation, Mahamat Deby outlined the possible consequences of the withdrawal of French troops.

" I know that we will have to fight," he said. "I am fully aware of the security, economic, diplomatic and media implications of this historic decision. We do not rule out that our compatriots will, unfortunately, be used to destabilise our country. But, firmly convinced that this decision is a response to the common and legitimate aspirations of the people of Chad, I have accepted it and I take full responsibility for it."

Deby knew what he was warning citizens about. Already on the evening of January 8, his presidential palace was subjected to an intense attack by unknown persons, the circumstances of which still raise questions.

ISLAMIC FACTOR
It is technically unlikely that the French will be able to withdraw their troops in the two weeks remaining until the end of January. Chad has long served as the largest base for France's military presence in the Sahel region and throughout Central Africa.

According to rumors, Mahmat Deby was even ready to "concede" to the French and give them another month to pack up, but on the condition that they would definitely leave the territory of sovereign Chad by February 28. On February 28, the holy month of Ramadan begins for Muslims in the country.

And the symbolism here has a double bottom. Until relatively recently, Chad was a predominantly Christian country. But the French placed their bets on the more passionate and, as it seemed to them, more obedient northern Muslim peoples - in defiance of the representative of the Christian south of the country, the first president of independent Chad, François Tombalbaye, who allowed himself a policy that was too independent from Paris.
And of course the Moslems are ever so much more romantic than everyday, boring, bourgeoise Christians of any skin tone. How were the French authorities to resist such a charming idea?
Already in 2014, the French tried to use semi-Islamist and semi-gangster formations to expel François Bozizé, who had been playing at independence, in the neighboring Central African Republic and unleashed a civil war there. They tried to use these same gangs repeatedly against the Wagner Group when they began to restore order in the CAR at the end of 2017.

And now the Islamic factor is turned against the French themselves.

Mahamat Deby is rumored to be an extremely vindictive person. His attitude toward former colonizers is due to the fact that it was Macron who questioned the legitimacy of his rise to power. One of his informal conditions for supporting Chad and the current government after the death of Idriss Deby was the renunciation of the presidential ambitions of Deby Jr.

However, this development of events called into question the future of the entire "Debi clan" and the dominant Zaghawa ethnic group.

The contender for power after the dictator's death was his beloved wife, the daughter of the Chadian ambassador to the United States, a representative of the Arab Tunjur tribe, Hinda Itno, who became a successful conductor of Washington's influence and, at the same time, an effective negotiator with international institutions in favor of her husband.

Under the threat of this internal coup, the entire numerous "Deby clan" united and nominated the most legitimate leader - Deby's eldest son Mahamat. He came to power largely unexpectedly for himself and on the wave of fateful events. The fact is that, legally, power in Chad after the death of the leader should have passed to the head of parliament, but not to the former commander of the main department of the security service of state institutions, a major general of the army and the son of the deceased president.

The political model of Chad is extremely fragile in its foundations. To understand: the East Saharan ethnic group Zaghawa, having a 1% share in the total population of the country, has concentrated 99% of power and resources in its hands. The ruling "Déby clan" belongs to it, all officers of the Chadian army and special services. A classic example of ethnocracy, formalized as a political dictatorship.

In essence, the political and power center in Chad has been constantly shifting vertically since its independence from the predominantly Christian and densely populated agricultural South to the sparsely populated Muslim pastoral North. This is the main geographic axis, the historical pattern and, frankly speaking, the tragedy of Chad's political system.

Given the limited resources (and Chad remains one of the poorest countries on the Black Continent), this state of affairs cannot but cause discontent. And there have always been those who take advantage of this discontent.

But the authorities are usually challenged by the same representatives of the more militant northern and northeastern nomadic peoples. For example, the most implacable opponent of Idriss Deby's rule, the rebel Front for Change and Accord (Front pour l'Alternance et la Concorde au Tchad, FACT), at whose hands Deby died three years ago, consists mainly of the Goran ethnic group. This Muslim ethnic group from the border with Libya has been the main competitor to the privileged position of the Zaghawa for many years.

That is why, despite the apparent stability of the regime, its durability is questionable. And young Deby, to his credit, is well aware of this. This explains his attempts to use the pan-African agenda and play on the patriotic feelings of young Chadians. This is how he finds additional support.

No matter how formal the recent presidential and parliamentary elections were for Chad, the current authorities are still trying to turn the prevailing mood in society to their advantage.

And they are, to put it mildly, anti-French. But it is not only President Deby who would like to take advantage of this.

THE FAILURE OF THE AMERICANS
The only serious political opponent of Mahamat Deby in the recent presidential elections was the leader of the political party "Transformers" Sukse Masra. And it is no coincidence that he focused on the socialist and pan-African agenda, appealing to the ideas of justice and patriotism.

Some even note the complete external and ideological similarity between Sukse Masra and the leader of the successful opposition party PASTEF in Senegal, Ousmane Sonko. At the same time, American money and technology stood behind both political projects.

The very fact of the return of oppositionist Masr to N'Djamena directly from New York and his subsequent appointment as Prime Minister of Chad in January of last year meant nothing less than certain behind-the-scenes agreements between the "Deby clan" and the Americans.

The Americans have been in Chad for a long time. At the same time, their interests here differ significantly from the French. The US quite openly supports the opposition here. During the presidential campaign itself, already in April-May of last year, Western English-language media did not hide their sympathies specifically for Masra "in defiance" of the French.

But the latter, apart from populism, did not have any decisive team, so his political ambitions failed. But the Americans' hope to realize their own influence at the expense of their yesterday's ally in Paris also failed.

It was the American military contingent that was the first to be expelled from Chad, back in April of last year. The fate of the American military in Chad was decided at the same time as the American military contingent in Niger (which literally replaced the "Africa Corps" of the Russian Defense Ministry).

The phenomenal nature of the situation is that, despite the apparent coordination of the actions of the authorities of Chad and Niger and the obvious benefit for Russia, the reasons and circumstances for the expulsion of the Americans are completely different. In the case of Niger, the Americans were counting on remaining in the region until the very end and were clearly implementing their own strategy, somewhere even pushing their "strategic partners", the French, in the back.

This had its risks and, judging by the fact that a year ago there was a significant correction of the American strategy of presence in the region (the bet on coastal locations), it can be assumed that the Americans allowed for the scenario of complete failure and calculated alternative options. And they were not at all embarrassed by either the material or strategic losses associated with leaving Niger.

In the case of Chad, the demands of local military authorities for the withdrawal of the task force of US military advisers and special forces (100 people in number) came as a complete surprise and a harsh reputational slap in the face for Washington.

At an informal level, this decision of the Chadian authorities was supported by the French side. It was a kind of retaliation for the unfriendly actions of American "allies" in a number of locations of traditional presence and influence of Paris.

But, like the Americans in Niger before them, the French are in for a nasty surprise after just over six months. They, too, are forced to abandon the military bases they have occupied since 1976.

The collapse of Françafrique and the withdrawal of French troops from Chad is an event that is not without approval from the Republicans of the Trump administration. This is another illustration of how complicated things are in the African direction in the relations between yesterday's allies.

And all of these are quite positive processes that Russia, among others, can take advantage of.

CHAD AND RUSSIA
The fact is clear, and few can argue with it now. N'Djamena is now moving from a policy of being a conductor of Paris' interests (the "French gendarme" in Africa) in the Sahel and Central Africa to an independent foreign policy.

The place left by France will not remain empty. And if the US could not fill it, then, by breaking relations with Paris, N'Djamena is simultaneously creating a new defense alliance with Ankara.

Turkey and Chad recently signed an agreement that provides for training of Chadian military personnel by Turkish instructors. In addition to the defense agreements, the Turkish armed forces will train the Chadian army. Turkey has been providing military assistance to Chad for several years, including modern training of military personnel and the supply of weapons. The cooperation is aimed at strengthening Chad's defense capabilities and its ability to fight terrorism.

Chad has been and remains an extremely important space for the implementation of geopolitical interests of a number of major powers, if only due to its geographical location.

Chad is a crossroads of multidirectional and complex interests: the Sahel, Central Africa, influence on North Africa (Libya), and North-East Africa (Sudan), etc., etc. Whoever controls Chad has influence over vast areas both in the interior of the African continent and on its outskirts.

Russia is an active player in this area.

Recently, the military authorities of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have turned away from the West in favor of Russian military support. The Central African Republic has been stabilized since 2017 with the help of Russian military instructors. Let us also note the Russian presence in Libya.

All these countries are neighbors of Chad. In this context, the mentioned visit of Deby to Moscow is not just a symbolic story, but also a geopolitical necessity.

It was one thing when Chad was behind the attempted rebellion of the “Coalition of Patriots for Change” in the pro-Russian Central African Republic in 2020. And it was quite another when in the summer of 2023 N’Djamena took a position of demonstrative neutrality against the backdrop of a pro-Russian military coup in neighboring Niger. Although Paris tried to persuade Chad to join ECOWAS in the blockade of Niamey and a military invasion to restore the status quo and free pro-French ex-President Mohamed Bazoum (the latter, by the way, is still in prison).

One cannot help but recall the words of the head of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Sergey Lavrov : "I can assure you that our friendship with the Republic of Chad will not affect its relations with France. We never ask anyone to choose their friends, but France has a different approach. In Paris's opinion, either you are with us or you are against us."

Chad was the last stop on the Russian Foreign Minister's African tour last June. But it was perhaps the most significant. During the visit, Lavrov prudently avoided making harsh anti-colonialist statements and focused on economic cooperation with the Central African Republic.

Chad has already significantly diversified its military cooperation over the past 5 years at least: along with France, N'Djamena also focused on the UAE, Turkey and Hungary. Now Russia can join this ranks on equal terms.

There are already obvious advantages for us at the level of foreign policy cooperation.

Immediately after Lavrov's June visit, the head of the Chadian Foreign Ministry made a statement that N'Djamena sees no point in a peace conference on Ukraine without Russia's participation. Now Chad is becoming a neutral and friendly party for the pro-Russian "Confederation of Sahel States." The long-standing tension on the border between Chad and the Central African Republic, when jidahids and armed opposition found refuge in their northern neighbor, is also completely removed.

Was Russia making a deliberate effort in this direction? No. It was simply geopolitical luck and, if you like, a historic chance for Russia to get even with the West.

The current situation, the current tectonic changes in the Sahel, are more a result of a series of accidents and changes within African communities themselves than the result of our own game.

The request for cooperation and an "open door" regime for Moscow comes from African countries - and for us this is somewhat unexpected. As it turns out, we are not particularly capable of the famous "security case", nor do we know how to back it up with anything.

We need to learn, and as quickly as possible. Because we have serious competitors.
Related:
Chad: 2025-01-14 Armed groups kill at least 40 farmers in Nigeria's Borno State
Chad: 2025-01-13 Chad's ruling party wins majority in controversial parliamentary election
Chad: 2025-01-12 France Hands over Second Army Base in Chad Amid Africa Drawdown
Related:
Mahamat Deby 01/13/2025 Chad's ruling party wins majority in controversial parliamentary election
Mahamat Deby 06/20/2024 Explosions at a military ammunition depot in Chad's capital kill 9
Mahamat Deby 05/13/2024 Russia's victory, US problems. What did the presidential elections in Chad show?

Link


Africa North
Chad's ruling party wins majority in controversial parliamentary election
2025-01-13
[ALJAZEERA] Chad's governing party has taken the majority of seats in last month's parliamentary election that was mostly boycotted by opposition parties, according to provisional results.

President Mahamat Idriss "Lil" Deby's party, the Patriotic Salvation Movement, has secured 124 of the 188 seats at the National Assembly, Ahmed Bartchiret, head of the electoral commission, announced late on Saturday.

The participation rate was put at 51.56 percent, which opposition parties said showed voter doubts about the validity of the contest.

The December 29 election was presented by Deby's party as the last stage of the country's transition to democracy after he took power as a military ruler in 2021.

The takeover followed the death of Deby's father and longtime President Idriss Deby Itno, who spent three decades in power. Mahamat Deby eventually won last year's disputed presidential vote.

The vote, which also included municipal and regional elections, was Chad's first in more than a decade.

Deby had said the election would ''pave the way for the era of decentralisation so long-awaited and desired by the Chadian people'', referring to the distribution of power beyond the national government to the various provincial and municipal levels.

'CHARADE'
The election was boycotted by more than 10 opposition parties, including the main Transformers party, whose candidate, Succes Masra, came second in the presidential election.

The main opposition had called the election a ''charade'' and expressed worries that it would be a repeat of the presidential vote, which election observers said was not credible.

Last month's vote came at a critical period for Chad, which is battling several security challenges — from attacks in the Lake Chad region by the Boko Haram
... not to be confused with Procol Harum, Harum Scarum, possibly to be confused with Helter Skelter. The Nigerian version of al-Qaeda and the Taliban rolled together and flavored with a smigeon of distinctly Subsaharan ignorance and brutality...
gang to ending decades-long military cooperation with La Belle France, its former colonial power.

The severing of military ties echoes recent moves by Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso
...The country in west Africa that they put where Upper Volta used to be. Its capital is Oogadooga, or something like that. Its president used to be Blaise Compaoré, who took office in 1987 and was chased out in 2014. Now it's the usual army officer type guy, Captain Ibrahim Traore, running things, who's just doing a bang-up job unless he's already been deposed...
, which all kicked out French troops and fostered closer ties with Russia after a string of coups in West and Central Africa's Sahel region
... North Africa's answer to the Pak tribal areas...
This week, security forces foiled an attack on the presidency that the government referred to as a ''destabilisation attempt''.
Link


Africa North
France Hands over Second Army Base in Chad Amid Africa Drawdown
2025-01-12
[Beitbart] France on Saturday handed over its second army base in Chad as part of an agreement with the country’s authorities to withdraw its military forces. The central African country in late November abruptly ended military cooperation with its former colonial ruler, and French troops began leaving the country in late December.

“Today… marks the handover of the Abeche base,” Defence Minister Issaka Malloua Djamouss said during an official ceremony. He called it a key step “leading to the final and total withdrawal of this army in our country”.

Around 100 troops left the Abeche base on Saturday, after equipment convoys departed Friday evening. The French army had around 1,000 personnel in Chad.

Djamouss added that the January 31 deadline for France to remove forces for good was “imperative”, “irreversible” and “non-negotiable”.

French soldiers and fighter aircraft have been stationed in Chad almost continuously since the country’s independence in 1960, helping to train the Chadian military. The planes also provided air support that proved crucial on several occasions in stopping rebels moving to seize power.

Mid-December, the jets were the first to go, followed by a contingent of 120 soldiers and the handover of the Faya base in northern Chad.

“Partnerships evolve but the friendship remains between our two nations, as does the solidarity between two sovereign nations that will continue to move forward side by side as they always have,” French embassy representative Fabien Talon said at the event.
French was once the language of diplomacy…
The central African country, one of the poorest in the world, was the last Sahel nation to host French troops. Paris at one point had deployed more than 5,000 soldiers as part of its anti-jihadist operation.

Chad had been a key link in France’s military presence in Africa and its last foothold in the wider Sahel region after the forced withdrawal of French troops from Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger in the wake of military coups.

The military authorities in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have pivoted towards Russia in recent years. Chad’s leader General Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno has also sought closer ties with Moscow in recent months, but talks to strengthen economic cooperation have yet to bear concrete results.
"Now. Who is the highest bidder?"
Deby described the agreement as “completely obsolete” and no longer aligned with the “political and geostrategic realities of our time”.

His election in May brought an end to a three-year political transition triggered by his father’s death in clashes with rebels in 2021.

Longtime ruler Idriss Deby Itno had received support from the French army to quell rebel offensives in 2008 and 2019.
Related:
Chad : 2025-01-09 Attackers killed in assault on Chad's presidential palace
Chad : 2025-01-06 DOJ Lawyer Who Demanded the FBI SWAT Raid on Mar-a-Lago Decides to Spend More Time Doing Something Else
Chad : 2024-12-29 Pelosi's 'House Ethics Committee' Caught in Multiple Staggering Lies in Gaetz Report
Related:
Abeche base: 2006-11-26 Chad rebels attack key town, army withdraws
Related:
Idriss Deby Itno 05/24/2024 Chad: Idriss D by sworn in as president following disputed elections
Idriss Deby Itno 01/02/2024 Chad's Deby appoints opposition leader, Masra, as new PM
Idriss Deby Itno 10/17/2023 Opposition leader in Chad delays return from exile

Link


Africa Subsaharan
Cameroon: Rehabilitated ex-Boko Haram fighters start civilian lives
2024-12-24
[AFRICANEWS] Moussa Idriss says he is ready to turn a new page. Once a Boko Haram
... not to be confused with Procol Harum, Harum Scarum, possibly to be confused with Helter Skelter. The Nigerian version of al-Qaeda and the Taliban rolled together and flavored with a smigeon of distinctly Subsaharan ignorance and brutality...
fighter, Idriss surrendered to the Cameroon
...a long, narrow country that fills the space between Nigeria and Chad on the northeast, CAR to the southeast. Prior to incursions by Boko Haram nothing ever happened there...
ian army in 2017.

At a centre for disarmed and demobilized fighters in Cameroon's Far North region, Idriss and his colleagues will be taught new skills to help them lead productive lives.

"Today, I am ready to return home to my family. I am happy to reunite with my family, my brothers, and my father. I want to stay in the community,'' said the ex-combatant.

Since 2018, Cameroon has set up two deradicalization centres in Mora and Meri where more than 3,000 former fighters are being trained in various trades.

"Here in Meri, we have nearly 3,000 ex-fighters who have gone through training at the Meri transit centre. Today, 600 of them have been selected as part of the first wave to reintegrate into different communities," said Evariste Atangana Zoua, a regional administrator.

Officials overseeing the Disarmament, Demobilization, and Re-integration (DDR) efforts say the process will be cartefully monitored to ensure ex-combatants are fully reformed.

But it is not always smooth.

While the ex-fighters are free to choose where they settle to lead a civilian life, local communities sometimes reject them due to past trauma and fear that they have not fully renounced violence.

"If we cannot forgive and accept reconciliation with those who took up arms yesterday, we will not achieve the lasting peace that the Head of State has so greatly wished for," said Oumar Bichair, the head of disarmament program in the Far North region.

Some of the re-integrated individuals are Nigerian. They have decided to remain in Cameroon for fear of reprisal if they return to their home country.
Link


Africa North
'African Front': France's Last Stronghold in the Sahel Will Be Eliminated
2024-12-04
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.
by Olesya Orlenko

[REGNUM] The latest news from Africa once again proves that France is rapidly losing its position on the continent. This process is expressed both in the reduction of the deployment points and capabilities of the French army, and in the diplomatic relations of Paris with the former colonies. One of the most important roles in these issues is played by questions of historical memory. How do its participants assess this process and how do they see its further development?

The defense cooperation agreements with France, which the Chadian government recently announced it would end, were signed in 1976. They were amended in 2019 to include a statement about Chad’s right to review its strategic partnership policy.

On November 28, 2024, Chad's government spokesman and foreign minister Abderaman Koulamalla announced that, due to this circumstance, the country was asking for the end of the French military presence on its territory. Now, about 1,000 French troops serving in Chad must go home, and the military bases will be closed.

The French media do not hide the fact that this news took France by surprise. After all, it was made a few hours after the departure of Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot from Chad. The head of the French Foreign Ministry met with Minister Koulamalla, as well as with President Mahamat Idriss Déby.

Neither said a word about their plans, although Chad called the decision "carefully thought out." The French side was apparently so stunned that it could not decide on an official response for a long time. And later it only announced that Chad's decision was "taken into account."

The French military presence in Chad was one of the most solid and extensive. It was there that the forces involved in military actions on the continent were concentrated, in particular in Operation Barkhane. After the loss of Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali, Chad was the last stronghold of France in the Sahel.

But the severity of the blow does not end there.

Almost at the same time, bad news for France came from Senegal. On November 28, Le Monde published an interview with President Bassir Diomai Fay, in which he also stated that the French military presence in his country was inappropriate.

"What country can have foreign troops on its territory and still claim independence? France does not allow this for itself, so it should not impose this on other countries," said the head of Senegal. According to him, the state has the right to choose its partners and build mutually beneficial relations based on the principles of respect.

Respect is a major theme in Faye's interview on the 80th anniversary of the tragic event that took place in Senegal due to France's fault.

During the Battle of France in May–June 1940, conscripts from Senegal—the so-called riflemen—and people from other African colonies served in the French army. They, along with all the other soldiers, were captured by the Germans after the defeat of the French army. The black soldiers were then separated from the whites and placed in frontstalags located in France. They remained there for the entire period of Nazi occupation. Moreover, since 1943, the camps were guarded by the French themselves.

After the release of former prisoners of war from Africa, it was decided to send them back to their homeland. After several years of imprisonment, former prisoners, as a rule, had no means of subsistence. Therefore, the new French government provided the released prisoners with a certain amount as a relocation allowance. However, it was not paid to blacks. And the conditions in the barracks, where they were kept before further transit to Africa, were often no less harsh than in the camps.

Even in continental France, the Senegalese protested by refusing to leave until they were paid the amount owed. The authorities recognized their right to these payments and promised to resolve the issue.

The problem arose again in Senegal, in the Thiarois camp, where soldiers released from Nazi captivity were taken. The former prisoners of war did not want to leave the camp without receiving what they had been promised.

The French officers decided to teach the recalcitrants a lesson. At dawn on December 1, 1944, the military surrounded the camp territory, announced an emergency wake-up call and assembly on the central square, and ordered an immediate evacuation. And upon hearing indignant cries, they opened fire on those gathered with machine guns.

Modern researchers believe that about 400 people died at the hands of the French. France, which was still fighting Nazi Germany at the time, did everything to conceal what happened. Many documents related to the case were falsified. 35 black participants in those events were tried in March 1945 for "rebellion."

Until the late 1990s, the French authorities did not remember this event and also did everything they could to prevent the dissemination of this information in absolutely all spheres, including culture. Rethinking the role of black soldiers in the First and Second World Wars began only after 2000.

However, the fact of the murder of the Senegalese shooters by the French was officially acknowledged only by President François Hollande in a speech given during the events at the Thiarois cemetery in 2012. On November 28, 2024, in a letter from Emmanuel Macron dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the tragedy, France's responsibility for the "murder" was mentioned. An important step, according to the President of Senegal, but insufficient for reconciliation on the basis of conflicts related to historical memory.

Faye expressed hope that France's subsequent actions would be a logical continuation of the statements made.

Meanwhile, at a ceremony on December 1, he announced the construction of a memorial complex on the territory of the Tjarua camp, as well as the inclusion of the study of the tragedy that occurred there in the school curriculum.

Recent events have become another reason for French journalists and experts to note the extremely low level of analysis and knowledge about Africa in the public space and among specialists. The reluctance to evaluate the changes that have occurred in French-speaking African countries, the inability to create an attractive image for young people lead to their ever greater distance from the former metropolis.

Meanwhile, the strategic value of the continent is becoming increasingly clear.

Of course, we are talking about Russia. Propaganda media talk about Africa as a "front of a new war" between the West and the Russians. More reasonable experts note that in the strategic, economic and cultural spheres, different countries compete on the Black Continent, including European ones: the USA, China, Turkey, Hungary and others.

Africa is currently diversifying its partnerships and pursuing a policy of maximum openness. Of course, the domestic agenda in each country also plays an important role. For example, Chad's decision can be explained, among other things, by the presidential elections scheduled for December 29, 2024. The decision to withdraw foreign troops was enthusiastically received by the population.

French experts warn that more and more African countries will demand that France stop interfering in their internal affairs and respect their sovereignty.

Link


Africa North
Chad: 117 terrorists killed in retaliation for Boko Haram attack
2024-11-08
[SAHEL-INTELLIGENCE] At least 117 bad boyz were potted by the Chadian army in the western part of the country during a military operation launched in response to an attack attributed to the jihadist group Boko Haram
... not to be confused with Procol Harum, Harum Scarum, possibly to be confused with Helter Skelter. The Nigerian version of al-Qaeda and the Taliban rolled together and flavored with a smigeon of distinctly Subsaharan ignorance and brutality...
, which took place on October 27. Around 40 Chadian soldiers were also reported killed, according to military sources. The incident occurred in the Lake Chad region, a strategic area bordering Cameroon
...a long, narrow country that fills the space between Nigeria and Chad on the northeast, CAR to the southeast. Prior to incursions by Boko Haram nothing ever happened there...
, Niger, and Nigeria, where the Chadian armed forces set up a retaliatory operation.

Under the direct command of President Mahamat Idriss D by Itno, the armed forces intensified their efforts to track down the perpetrators of this attack and to strengthen security in the region, said Colonel Nour Adoum, head of a military unit in the Lake Chad area. He added: This operation is a direct response to the attacks and demonstrates the authorities' commitment to fighting terrorism and protecting the illusory sovereignty of the country .

Military authorities stated that, over the past three days, 117 bad boyz were potted. As part of their response to the jihadist attacks, the Chadian army conducted another operation last Wednesday, during which at least 65 bad boyz were potted, according to military officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Chadian President Mahamat Idriss D by Itno promised to strengthen efforts to eradicate these terrorist groups and emphasized the importance of international cooperation in the fight against terrorism.

Lake Chad, a vast body of water shared by Chad, Niger, Cameroon, and Nigeria, is home to numerous islands that serve as hideouts for jihadist groups, including Boko Haram and the Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not really Moslems....
in West Africa (ISWAP). These groups aim to establish an Islamic State, particularly in Nigeria, which is predominantly Moslem in the north and Christian in the south.

Boko Haram and ISWAP have caused the deaths of over 35,000 people and forced nearly 2.7 million people to flee their homes, primarily in Nigeria but also in neighboring countries such as Chad, Cameroon, and Niger, according to United Nations
...an organization conceived in the belief that we're just one big happy world, with the sort of results you'd expect from such nonsense...
data. As of June 2024, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) recorded over 220,000 displaced persons in the Lake Chad region due to the attacks by gangs.

Link


Africa North
Chad threatens to exit regional security force after deadly attack
2024-11-06
[AFRICANEWS] Chad's President Mahamat Idriss Deby has issued a stark warning that his country may withdraw from a regional security coalition, citing frustrations over its effectiveness in countering krazed killer threats in the Lake Chad region.

Deby's remarks came during a visit to the area on Sunday, where he expressed concerns about the Multinational Joint Task Force's (MNJTF) impact in tackling gangs.

The announcement followed an attack in late October that claimed the lives of around 40 Chadian soldiers. The incident, reportedly carried out by suspected Boko Haram
... not to be confused with Procol Harum, Harum Scarum, possibly to be confused with Helter Skelter. The Nigerian version of al-Qaeda and the Taliban rolled together and flavored with a smigeon of distinctly Subsaharan ignorance and brutality...
bad boys, highlights the ongoing security challenges facing the region.

The Lake Chad basin borders Chad, Nigeria, Niger, and Cameroon
...a long, narrow country that fills the space between Nigeria and Chad on the northeast, CAR to the southeast. Prior to incursions by Boko Haram nothing ever happened there...
, each contributing troops to the MNJTF, which was formed to counter krazed killer activity across these national borders.

Deby emphasized his disappointment in the level of coordination within the force, pointing to "a lack of joint efforts against the common enemy." He argued that the force, intended to streamline operations and intelligence-sharing, has instead "seemed to be in a slump."

The potential withdrawal of Chad a nation recognized for its well-trained and resilient military would be a considerable setback for the MNJTF, which has struggled to unify its approach amid various challenges.

The Lake Chad region has remained a flashpoint for bad boy attacks, with krazed killer activity spilling over from Boko Haram's origins in northeastern Nigeria since 2009.

At this time, the governments of Nigeria, Niger, and Cameroon have not commented on Deby's statement.
Link


Africa North
The Russian Armed Forces freed Chadian soldiers captured by Islamic militants
2024-05-29
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.
[Regnum] The Russian military has freed Chadian soldiers captured by Islamic militants. The Russian Ministry of Defense reported this on May 28.

“In Central Africa, Russian military personnel conducted a joint operation with colleagues from the Republic of Chad to free Chadian military personnel from captivity by militants of illegal armed groups,” the statement says.

The department clarified that nine months ago, Islamic militants captured 21 members of the Chadian armed forces. This happened while clearing mines at the airport in the Tibesti region.
…a central Sahara mountain range in northern Chad and southern Libya.
It is noted that the terrorists kept prisoners in their camp in inhumane conditions and subjected them to torture.

The Ministry of Defense added that all prisoners were taken to a temporary base, where Russian doctors provided them with the necessary assistance and carried out operations to remove fragments. After that, under the control of Russian military personnel, they were evacuated to their homeland.

The Minister of Defense of Chad thanked Russia for the operation carried out to free the military personnel. He noted that Russia has always been a reliable partner of African countries, unlike France, Britain and the United States, which received only benefits from Africans.

As Regnum reported, the results of the presidential elections were announced in Chad. The winner was determined in the first round of voting. He became the current transitional president, Mahamat Idriss Deby, who received 61.03% of the votes.

In April, the Chadian government sent a letter to the United States of America regulating the presence of American military personnel in the country. The letter did not contain a direct demand for US troops to leave Chad, but the authorities of the African country demanded that the US military leave the base in N'Djamena.

In January 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin, at a meeting with the transitional president of the African republic, Mahamat Idriss Déby in Moscow, said that Russia was closely monitoring what was happening in Chad.
Related:
Chad: 2024-05-24 Chad: Idriss D by sworn in as president following disputed elections
Chad: 2024-05-24 Mass exodus from Abu Shouk camp as violence escalates in El-Fasher
Chad: 2024-05-22 Fifth Los Angeles-class fast-attack submarine added to line-up at Naval Base Point Loma
Related:
Tibesti: 2019-02-10 Chadian army says 250 rebels captured after rebel convoy targeted
Tibesti: 2016-11-27 Libya: Air strike on Tebu Tibesti mountain control point
Tibesti: 2016-10-05 5 die in Benghazi artillery attack
Link


Africa Subsaharan
Chad: Idriss D by sworn in as president following disputed elections
2024-05-24
[AFRICANEWS] Chad's president-elect, Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno, was sworn in on Thursday at a ceremony in the capital, N’Djamena, attended by several leaders from the region.

Deby’s inauguration came a week after the constitutional council confirmed he had won the disputed 6 May election outright, with 61 per cent of the vote.

He seized power three years ago after the death of his father, Idriss Déby, who had ruled Chad with an iron fist for three decades.

A career soldier, Deby junior had promised to hold elections within 18 months, but his government postponed the poll and allowed him to run for president

Opposition leader, Succes Masra, a staunch opponent of the junta won a 18,5 per cent share of the vote.

He unsuccessfully challenged the results of the election, which international NGOs described as neither credible nor free.
Related:
Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno 01/02/2024 Chad's Deby appoints opposition leader, Masra, as new PM
Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno 10/17/2023 Opposition leader in Chad delays return from exile
Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno 08/03/2023 Fight for Niger. A big war could start in Africa as early as Sunday

Link


Africa North
Chad goes to polls to vote for a new president
2024-05-06
[AFRICANEWS] Candidates in Chad delivered their final campaigning messages on Saturday ahead of the country’s first presidential vote since the death of long time ruler Idriss Deby.

Success Masra, currently prime minister of the interim government, is one the main challengers.

Speaking to supporters in the capital, N'Djamena, the former African Development Bank executive promised young people a better future and the creation of more jobs.

A "minimum package of dignity" in his programme includes an ambitious five-year plan to create 200,000 jobs, divided equally between the private and public sectors.

Masra’s grassroots campaign has also promised to deal with other urgent issues like access to electricity, water, and security for all.

“We would like to live in a country at peace and reconciled, so the victory on the horizon is not that of one side against another, but that of all the people of Chad. The victory of the hope of peace, the victory of an enthusiastic future over a difficult past,” he said.

Chad's interim president the favourite as the country goes to the polls

[Africanews] As Chad goes to the polls on Monday, it is widely believed that incumbent President General Mahamat Idriss Deby will win easily.

He seized power three years ago after his father, Idriss Déby Itno, was killed, apparently on the battlefield fighting rebels trying to overthrow his government.

Deby senior had ruled Chad with an iron fist for three decades.

A career soldier, the new president promised to hold elections within 18 months, but his government postponed the poll and allowed him to run for president.

It has said the election will return the country to constitutional rule, but opposition groups say they have no doubt the poll will be rigged.

Deby is backed by the ruling Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS) party.
Related:
Chad: 2024-05-04 Russian troops appear near a US base in Niger
Chad: 2024-05-01 Eight Darfur groups unveil plan to reclaim cities from Rapid Support Forces
Chad: 2024-04-29 RSF commander warns of attack on El-Fasher, urges surrender
Related:
Idriss Deby 04/26/2024 Some US troops set to depart Chad, at least temporarily
Idriss Deby 02/23/2024 Chadian Troops Reportedly Kill Several Boko Haram Terrorists During Fresh Clash
Idriss Deby 01/02/2024 Chad's Deby appoints opposition leader, Masra, as new PM

Related:
Idriss Deby 04/26/2024 Some US troops set to depart Chad, at least temporarily
Idriss Deby 02/23/2024 Chadian Troops Reportedly Kill Several Boko Haram Terrorists During Fresh Clash
Idriss Deby 01/02/2024 Chad's Deby appoints opposition leader, Masra, as new PM


Related:
N''Djamena: 2024-05-04 Russian troops appear near a US base in Niger
N''Djamena: 2024-04-26 Some US troops set to depart Chad, at least temporarily
N''Djamena: 2024-02-29 TchadOne: group of military officers is trying to take control of the presidential palace in Chad
Related:
African Development Bank: 2023-12-29 Burkina Faso Opposition Leader, Ouedraogo Declared Missing After Being Whisked Away By Secret Policemen
African Development Bank: 2023-11-12 AfDB lifts financial sanctions off Gabon after Bongo removed in coup
African Development Bank: 2023-10-31 After the coup, gloomy prospects for Niger's economy
Related:
Mahamat Idriss Deby 04/26/2024 Some US troops set to depart Chad, at least temporarily
Mahamat Idriss Deby 01/02/2024 Chad's Deby appoints opposition leader, Masra, as new PM
Mahamat Idriss Deby 10/17/2023 Opposition leader in Chad delays return from exile

Related:
Idriss Déby Itno 01/04/2014 Attacks on Chadians in C.Africa Will Not Go 'Unpunished'
Idriss Déby Itno 03/18/2013 Terror Haven in Mali Feared After French Leave
Idriss Déby Itno 02/25/2007 Chadian PM dies in Paris hospital

Link


Africa North
Some US troops set to depart Chad, at least temporarily
2024-04-26
[AOL] The United States is planning to temporarily withdraw some of its troops from Chad, U.S. officials said on Thursday, a move that comes just days after Washington was forced to agree to remove its troops from neighboring Niger.

Earlier this month Chad's air force chief ordered the U.S. to halt activities at an air base near the capital N'Djamena, according to a letter sent to the transitional government and seen by Reuters.

Pentagon spokesperson Major General Patrick Ryder said a portion of the U.S. troops in Chad would reposition out of the country.

He said it was a "temporary step" as part of an ongoing review of security cooperation with Chad, which would resume after the country's May 6 presidential election.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said a few dozen special forces troops who are in Chad as planners and advisers will move to Germany for now.

Interim President Mahamat Idriss Deby is running for election next month, making Chad the first of West and Central Africa's junta-ruled countries to organise a vote. Opposition groups have flagged concerns about its credibility.
Read the rest at the link
Related:
Chad: 2024-04-24 UAE denies funding Sudanese paramilitary group
Chad: 2024-04-24 South Sudan's president says against Sudan's disintegration
Chad: 2024-04-21 Yankees, go home!
Link



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