Kuwait Times

Dozens dead in fresh Chad ethnic fighting

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N’DJAMENA: At least 37 people have been killed in fresh fighting this week between farmers and herders from rival ethnic groups in Chad, President Idriss Deby said yesterday. The violence broke out over three days in the province of Ouaddai, a strategic area on the eastern border with Sudan, he said.

“The intercommu­nal conflict has become a national concern,” Deby told a press conference to mark the country’s independen­ce day. “We are witnessing a terrible phenomenon.” Eastern Chad is in the grip of a cycle of violence between nomadic camel herdersman­y from the Zaghawa ethnic group from which Deby hails-and sedentary farmers from the Ouaddian community. Drought and population growth have aggravated the conflict. The latest fighting erupted on Monday in the Wadi Hamra district after a rancher was found dead, said a local charity representa­tive who asked not to be named for their safety. Three more killings followed that discovery, the representa­tive said. Fresh violence flared up at another nearby location the following day, a local tribal official told AFP. “The communitie­s clashed with firearms. The fighting was particular­ly deadly,” the official said, saying that at least 25 people were killed. One hospital source told AFP the death toll was as high as 44.

The clashes on Tuesday were linked to the death of the young rancher, historian and head of the Centre for the study of prevention of extremism in Chad, Ahmat Yacoub Dabio said. Describing the clashes, Deby said that police sent to the scene came under fire. “Those with guns are not hesitating to shoot the police. We must wage a total war against those who carry weapons and are killing people,” he said. Deby said he would visit the area in the future, without saying when.

Guns from Sudan

Last month Deby, who has been in power for almost three decades, hinted that military courts may be reintroduc­ed in a bid to curb the unrest, a suggestion denounced by the country’s opposition. Deby said the decades-long conflict over land in Ouaddai had spread since the start of this year to other regions where previously the communitie­s lived side by side in a an “exemplary” manner.

He cited the eastern province of Sila where he said more than 40 people had been killed since January. Deby blamed the surge in violence partly on an influx of guns to Chad from conflict zones in neighborin­g Libya, Central African Republic and Sudan, where a protest movement ousted the president in April.

“The government has created special disarmamen­t units. We take away the weapons, but the next day more arrive.” Legislativ­e elections in Chad are scheduled to take place by the end of the year. They have been postponed several times since 2015 as Deby, who grabbed power in 1990, looks to maintain his grip on the country.

 ?? — AFP ?? ABECHE: A farmer walks among his herd of livestock on the road between Adre and Farchana, in the region of Ouaddai, Chad. At least 37 people have been killed in fresh fighting between rival ethnic groups in Chad, President Idriss Deby says, calling the violence a ‘terrible phenomenon’.
— AFP ABECHE: A farmer walks among his herd of livestock on the road between Adre and Farchana, in the region of Ouaddai, Chad. At least 37 people have been killed in fresh fighting between rival ethnic groups in Chad, President Idriss Deby says, calling the violence a ‘terrible phenomenon’.

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