Daily Trust

Chad wields influence across Africa in unexpected ways

- President Idriss Deby of Chad

oko Haram, the insurgency in northern Mali and the crisis in the Central African Republic. One thing unites these three conflicts: the country of Chad. This large, central African nation is becoming something of a regional power.

Earlier this month, protesters belonging to the #bringbacko­urgirls group, which is pushing for the release of the more than 200 schoolgirl­s abducted by the Nigerian Islamist extremist group Boko Haram earlier this year, marched on an unusual target: the embassy of Chad.

With a long history of wars and coups, Chad recently has been playing an outsized role in west and central African affairs.

A short-lived cease-fire between the Islamist group and Nigeria’s government was brokered in Chad’s capital N’Djamena. The country lies close to territory that Boko Haram has effectivel­y taken over both in Nigeria and in Cameroon. Yet, the group never seems to bother attacking Chad.

All these factors have led to a growing feeling of suspicion in Nigeria. Many feel Chad is not doing enough to fight off the Islamist group, or worse, is somehow cooperatin­g with the insurgents.

Ryan Cummings is chief Africa analyst at red24, a South Africa-based crisis management firm, who has also written on Chad’s geopolitic­s.

“There’s the perception within Nigeria that its neighbors are not doing enough to aid the country in combating Boko Haram, when it’s become quite apparent that Boko Haram is not just a Nigeria-specific problem,” he said.

That might be a deliberate calculatio­n on Boko Haram’s part, Cummings said. Chad is something of a military power. Between 2000 and 2009, Chad under President Idriss Déby raised military spending by 663 percent. Much of that money came from newly tapped oil reserves.

Cummings said the country has one of the best militaries in the region. Its troops are part of the United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission in northern Mali, and were controvers­ially deployed to the Central African Republic, where rights groups accused them of committing atrocities and taking sides in the country’s ethno-religious conflict.

Cummings said Deby’s focus on military supremacy is an attempt to preserve his own position, which he came into via a military coup.

( Voice of America-VOA).

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