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Chad regime survives rebel attack on capital
By Francis Dubois and Alex Lantier
11 February 2008
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Rebel troops reached Chads capital, NDjamena, on
Saturday, February 2, in a rapid movement in pickup trucks armed
with heavy machine guns. Once there, the rebels fought it out
for two days with government and French troops stationed in NDjamena,
leading to more than 160 deaths and around 1,000 wounded, according
to February 7 Red Cross estimates.
By Tuesday, February 5, all reports indicated that the rebels
had been expelled from NDjamena, and the army under Chads
President Idris Déby Itno had retained control of the capital.
Some reports suggested that the rebels had accepted the
principle of an immediate cease-fire after intense
diplomatic pressures from the international community.
The fighting sent tens of thousands of inhabitants fleeing
towards neighbouring Cameroon. Western governments and certain
African and Asian states also evacuated their citizens. According
to a US spokesman, the US embassy was completely evacuated. Francewhich
has 1,450 troops, including a large contingent stationed at the
NDjamena airportorganised a mass evacuation of its
civilian citizens in Chad through the airport.
The rebel offensive was carried out by Chads three main
armed resistance groupsthe Union of Democratic Forces (UFDD),
led by Mahamat Nouri, the RFC (Rally of Forces for Change) of
Timan Erdimi, and the UFDD-Fundamental led by Abdelwahid Aboud
Makaye. Until now divided by ethnic differences, these groups
formed an alliance last December. They have also reportedly been
supported and financed by the government of neighbouring Sudan,
in a tit-for-tat conflict with the central government of Chad,
which aids Darfur rebel groups.
There was much speculation in the French press that the main
goal of this offensivemounted with the assistance of the
Sudanwas to discourage the upcoming deployment of a largely
French but nominally European force, EUFOR, in eastern Chad and
the neighbouring Darfur province of Sudan. The Sudanese government,
for its part, strictly denied all interference in Chads
internal affairs.
There were also reports that rebels hoped to capitalise on
resentment of the unequal distribution of the revenues from Chads
oil exports, which run through a pipeline to the Cameroon coast.
Déby, an ethnic Zaghawa, has also been destabilised
by his refusal to use his full military resources to help the
Darfur rebels against the Sudanese government in Khartoum. Zaghawas
predominate in Chads army, as well as within the Darfur
rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and the Justice
and Equality Movement (JEM).
Déby, who seized power in a coup in 1990, has managed
to stay in power largely due to the backing of France. French
troops (the Epervier force) have remained in Chad, a former colony,
since 1986, when they were sent to act against the Libyan government
of Muammar Khadaffi, to the north. Déby survived elections
in 1996 and 2001both marred by allegations of massive vote
rigginga 2004 coup attempt, and a 2006 rebellion also launched
from eastern Chad. On that occasion, French President Jacques
Chirac publicly and openly intervened on Débys side,
ordering French fighter jets to bomb the rebel column and alert
government forces to its presence.
The new government of President Nicolas Sarkozy acted in a
somewhat more guarded fashion this time. It proposed to evacuate
Déby during the worst of the fighting, and issued contradictory
statements about its attitude towards Déby. Defence Minister
Hervé Morin said on Saturday that the government was neutral
in the conflict on February 2; the next day, Foreign Minister
Bernard Kouchner claimed, We are not implicated in this
war, then declared in a second statement that Morins
statement about being neutral was incorrect.
Instead, France called an emergency meeting of the UN Security
Council, pressing for a resolution granting France the right to
intervene militarily in Chad. After the resolution passed on Monday,
Sarkozy announced that France would do its duty in Chad.
Plans were announced to begin deploying EUFOR as early as next
week.
French forces played an important role in the fighting, however,
since French tanks held the NDjamena airport against rebel
assaults and allowed government attack helicopters to land, refuel
and rearm there during operations against the rebels. France also
reportedly supplied ammunitions provided by Libya for Chads
Soviet-era T-55 tanks.
Philippe Hugon, an academic and author interviewed on Chad
by the centre-left French daily Le Monde, called Frances
intervention indirect but decisive. He said: Upon
their arrival in NDjamena, there were about 2,000 rebels
with rocket launchers, machine guns, and assault rifles. On the
other side, the regular army had about 2,000 to 3,000 men, four
helicopters, and probably about a dozen tanks.
The rebels managed to take about half of NDjamena,
but they had to face a counter-offensive with helicopters and
heavy weapons, and were forced to withdraw. To take the city entirely,
they would have had to provoke defections in the army and take
control of fuel and weapons dumps. Once Sudan refused to give
them official military support, they could only lose. And above
all, they didnt manage to take the airport, which allowed
the governments helicopters to attack them.
Part of the reason for French imperialisms caution in
acting to bolster Déby is the widespread recognition that
his regime is deeply unpopular. Eight million of Chads 10
million inhabitants live on less than US$1 per day, political
opposition figures are routinely arrested several were
detained during the latest fighting in NDjamena and
the opposition groups are all drawn from the same corrupt Zaghawa
elite that has dominated Chads postcolonial politics. Many
press reports noted that the RFCs leaders, Timan and Tom
Erdimi, are Débys nephews and former leaders of Chads
oil and cotton ministries.
Paris also knows that other European capitals have little enthusiasm
for providing forces to act as junior partners in a French-dominated
European coalition force such as EUFOR. In a February 5 comment,
Frances secret colonial policy, the German Süddeutsche
Zeitung wrote: If Paris saved her protégé
[Déby] by military means, she has shown her critics
that Chad is still under her control. However, it
also noted that a neutral policy by France risks letting
a pro-Sudanese regime install itself in NDjamena.
It concluded that, for Paris, the worst solution would be one
involving it in a long-term conflict.
French imperialism is increasingly outclassed by other imperialist
powers in its struggle to maintain economic and political control
of its former African colonies, as China and the US increase their
influence. France fell behind Germany (in 2002) and then China
(in 2004) as a source of African imports. China in particular
has emerged as a new presence in Africa, seeking contracts especially
for oil and raw materials. It recently negotiated a contract with
the government of Chad to build an oil refinery in NDjamena
and has already invested US$6 billion in Sudan, where it obtains
8 percent of its oil imports.
At the same time, the destabilisation of Chad would further
undermine French influence and risk exporting the Darfur conflict,
already affecting eastern Chad and the Central African Republic,
towards Cameroon and Nigeria, the centre of West Africas
oil industry.
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