New Era

Chad’s main opposition figures in hiding

- -Nampa/AFP

LIBREVILLE - The leaders of Chad’s main opposition groups said on Wednesday that they had been forced into hiding over fears for their safety, following a deadly crackdown on anti-junta demonstrat­ions.

Succes Masra, head of the Transforme­rs party, told AFP he was in “another country” because he was wanted by the “presidenti­al guard”.

Max Loalngar of Wakit Tamma said he was “hiding somewhere within the country” to avoid arrest.

Both opposition figures have accused the junta of “extrajudic­ial killings” and mass arrests as they suppressed protests over delayed elections.

Officially, around 50 people died when security forces opened fire on the demonstrat­ors in the capital N’Djamena and several other cities last month. But opposition groups say the actual toll was much higher, with unarmed civilians massacred, at least 300 people wounded and hundreds more arrested.

Masra and Loalngar said their groups have called on the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague to investigat­e alleged “crimes against humanity”.

The African Union Commission has condemned the violent repression, while Amnesty Internatio­nal said that a child was among the several dozen killed by the authoritie­s’ excessive use of force.

Opposition groups had encouraged demonstrat­ions on 20 October to mark the date when the ruling military had initially promised to cede power - a timeline now extended by two years by general Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno.

The 38-year-old took power from his father, Idriss Deby Itno, who ruled for 30 years before dying in an operation against rebels in April 2021.

The junta has branded the protests an “insurrecti­on” supported by foreign powers. In the aftermath, the government made hundreds of arrests, suspended all party political activity and imposed a curfew.

Authoritie­s said the casualties included a dozen members of the security forces. Prime Minister Saleh Kebzabo told AFP on Tuesday that the country had accepted the principle of an internatio­nal inquiry “as soon as possible” into the protest deaths.

The following day, chair of the African Union Commission Moussa Faki Mahamat - a former Chadian prime minister stressed “the urgency of a serious and credible investigat­ion” to bring those responsibl­e to justice. The Chadian Convention for the Protection of Human Rights, a local civil society group, says 600 people have been detained since 20 October, with most “exiled” to labour camps and prisons far from the capital.

The World Organisati­on Against Torture says up to 2 000 people have been thrown behind bars. Opposition figures Masra and Loalngar said the authoritie­s had been hunting down their supporters in recent weeks.

“On 21 October, soldiers from the presidenti­al guard came to get me at our headquarte­rs and when they didn’t find me, detained 27 members of my team,” said Masra.

Onlyfourar­eleftalive being interrogat­ed. The others are dead, some of those who were with them have told me, even if we don’t have the bodies,” he claimed. “The manhunt is ongoing across the country.”

Loalngar told a similar story: “Security forces are going from house to house, people are being arrested for anything,” he said. “Like all our activists, I had to go into hiding.”

Contacted by AFP, several government representa­tives declined to say how many people had been arrested since 20 October.

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Transforme­r… Succes Masra, head of the Transforme­rs party in Chad is in hiding.
Photo: Contribute­d Transforme­r… Succes Masra, head of the Transforme­rs party in Chad is in hiding.

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