Chad opposition ‘live in fear’ one year after bloody crackdown

Author: AFP

On the eve of the first anniversary of the bloody repression of a protest against military rule in Chad, the opposition still faces arrest, intimidation and threats, despite a looming referendum on reform.

The young and at the time three-star general Mahamat Idriss Deby was proclaimed president by the army two and a half years ago after the death of his father, who led the semi-desert state for more than 30 years.

Now, a referendum on a new constitution is scheduled in two months’ time and is due to set the stage for “free” elections and a return to civilian rule. Deby had said elections would be held within 18 months of his takeover. But last October 20, he pushed that back two more years.

Chadians poured out onto the streets in protest.

Many of the thousands who demonstrated set off from the headquarters of The Transformers, the leading opposition party, in N’Djamena’s Abena district.

The junta has admitted that about 50 protesters died in the capital, while the opposition and NGOs say the true figure from police and army gunfire was far higher.

Hundreds of youth and opposition figures were arrested, although some managed to flee abroad, including Transformers’ leader Succes Masra.

After Black Thursday, the regime said 621 youths, including 83 minors were detained at an infamous desert jail at Koro Toro, 600 kilometres (370 miles) from the capital.

Six weeks later, they were tried in a closed court without legal representation. Many were sentenced to jail.

Local and international NGOs as well as UN-mandated experts estimate that 1,000-2,000 were arrested. Dozens if not hundreds of them have since disappeared.

“We are still asking for their bodies that are hidden in the desert,” said Djimrangar Ngueto. The October 8 arrest of 72 opposition supporters is an attempt to limit political dissent in the country, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said.

The New-York based organisation also said an arrest warrant for Transformers’ Masra was posted on social media by authorities on October 5. The warrant, issued in June, appeared after Masra said he intended to return to N’Djamena on October 18. He has since delayed to November.

Masra is wanted for a variety of alleged crimes, from an attempted attack on constitutional order to incitement to hatred and insurrectional uprising.

“Threatening an opposition leader with arrest and detaining his supporters makes clear that fundamental freedoms are still very much at risk,” said Lewis Mudge, HRW’s Central Africa director.

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