President Idriss Deby, who won a 6th term on Monday, has died of injuries suffered on the frontline, an army spokesman said.
The 68-year-old son of a herder was one of the longest-serving leaders in Africa [File: Aurelien Meunier/Getty Images]
Chad’s President Idriss Deby has died of injuries suffered on the frontline in the Sahel country’s north, where he had gone to visit soldiers battling rebels, an army spokesman said on Tuesday.
Deby, 68, “has just breathed his last
defending the sovereign nation on the battlefield” over the weekend, army
spokesman General Azem Bermandoa Agouna said in a statement read out on state
television.
The army said Deby had been commanding his
army at the weekend as it battled against rebels who had launched a major
incursion into the north of the country on election day.
The army said a military council led by the
late president’s 37-year-old son Mahamat Idriss Deby, a four-star general,
would replace him. A curfew has been imposed and the country’s borders have
been shut in the wake of the sudden death of the president, army said.
The shock announcement came a day after Deby,
who came to power in a rebellion in 1990, won a sixth term, as per provisional
results released on Monday. Deby took 79.3 percent of the vote in the April 11
presidential election, the results showed.
Deby postponed his victory speech to
supporters and instead went to visit Chadian soldiers battling rebels,
according to his campaign manager.
The rebel group Front for Change and Concord
in Chad (FACT), which is based across the northern frontier with Libya,
attacked a border post in the provinces of Tibesti and Kanem on election day
and then advanced hundreds of kilometres south.
But it suffered a setback over the weekend.
Chad’s military spokesman Agouna told the
Reuters news agency that army troops killed more than 300 fighters and captured
150 on Saturday in Kanem province, around 300 kilometres (185 miles) from the
capital Ndjamena.
Five government soldiers were killed and 36
were injured, he said.
Relished the military culture
Deby was a herder’s son from the Zaghawa
ethnic group who took the classic path to power through the army, and relished
the military culture.
His latest election victory had never been in
doubt, with a divided opposition, boycott calls, and a campaign in which
demonstrations were banned or dispersed.
Deby had campaigned on a promise of bringing
peace and security to the region, but his pledges were undermined by the rebel
incursion.
The army said a military council led by the late president’s 37-year-old son Mahamat Idriss Deby, a four-star general, would replace him [File: Marco Longari/AFP]
The government had sought on Monday to assure concerned residents that the offensive was over.
There had been panic in some areas of Ndjamena
on Monday after tanks were deployed along the city’s main roads, an AFP
journalist reported. The tanks were later withdrawn apart from a perimeter
around the president’s office, which is under heavy security during normal
times.
“The establishment of a security deployment in
certain areas of the capital seems to have been misunderstood,” government
spokesman Cherif Mahamat Zene had said on Twitter on Monday.
“There is no particular threat to fear.”
However, the US embassy in Ndjamena had on
Saturday ordered non-essential personnel to leave the country, warning of
possible violence in the capital. Britain also urged its nationals to leave.
France’s embassy said in an advisory to its
nationals in Chad that the deployment was a precaution and there was no
specific threat to the capital.
The group, FACT, has a non-aggression pact
with Khalifa Haftar, a military strongman who controls much of Libya’s east.
FACT, a group mainly made up of the Saharan
Goran people, said in a statement on Sunday that it had “liberated” the Kanem
region. Such claims in remote desert combat zones are difficult to verify.
The Tibesti mountains near the Libyan frontier
frequently see fighting between rebels and the army, as well as in the
northeast bordering Sudan. France carried out air raids in February 2019 to
stop an incursion there.
In February 2008, a rebel assault reached the
gates of the presidential palace before being pushed back with French backing.
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