| Rapports
sur les relations éthniques /
Reports on Ethnic Relations |
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The
following section is consisted of part, full or summaries of articles
from diverses sources (newspapers, newsletters, etc...).
La section suivante est constituée d'exraits, de la totalité
ou de résumés d'articles provenant d'origines diverses
(journaux,bulletins, etc..).
02
/ 16 / 2004
"Chad
and the Darfur conflict"
A
year-old conflict pitting rebels against government forces and
militia groups in the Darfur states of western Sudan has created
a humanitarian crisis that has spilled over into neighbouring
Chad, as well as concerns among some observers about the region
s stability.
These concerns are rooted in the fact that cross-border ethnic
solidarity in the region is a more powerful force than nationality.
Since July, more than 110,000 Sudanese refugees have crossed the
largely unguarded 1,350-km border separating the two countries.
But
Chad is much more than a passive host to the fleeing victims of
one of Africa s newest wars, which began in February 2003 when
two rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA) and the Justice
and Equality Movement (JEM), rose up to push their political and
economic agendas.
At the same time as playing mediator between Khartoum and the
rebels, Chad has openly supplied troops to the Sudanese army in
Darfur. But, covertly, it also serves as a conduit for arms that
are fuelling the war, as an arena for Sudanese militias pursuing
the refugees across the border, and as a refuge or assembly point
for rebels and their families, say observers.
Different ethnic groups in Chad may also be supplying both the
SLA and JEM, as well as the militias aligned to the Sudanese government,
with manpower.
These murky and often conflicting roles threaten not only to destabilise
the current relative peace in Chad but may also lead to a regional
war fought along ethnic lines, say observers.
"It's a tribal war that has become a problem between the
two countries," commented a former army officer and Zaghawah
business man in the Chadian capital, N'Djamena.
Mediating
Role
Chad mediated talks between the government of Sudan
and the SLA, resulting in a nominal ceasefire from September to
December.
Chadian President Idriss Deby, himself a Zaghawah, was thought
to be a good choice as mediator because of his shared ethnicity
with many of the rebels, his deep-rooted connections with and
knowledge of Darfur, and his support base there which allowed
him - with Khartoum's knowledge - to launch a coup from the region
in 1990. (His predecessor, Hissene Habre, also launched his takeover
from Darfur in 1982).
But a chorus of voices has long questioned his impartiality.
After the SLA and JEM emerged in February 2003 demanding political
and economic rights, Deby committed himself to cooperating militarily
with Sudanese President Umar al-Bashir to crush them. He officially
sent 500 troops to take part in joint army operations in Sudan,
but commentators later suggested that the real figure was close
to 2,000, according to the International Crisis Group (ICG) think-tank.
Sudanese Interior Minister Gen Abd al-Rahim Muhammad Husayn announced
to parliament in May that Chad had also contributed three helicopters
and 17 vehicles to the same campaign.
When the time came to extend the 45-day September ceasefire agreement
with the SLA, the Chadian government deported 35 Darfurian intellectuals
who had arrived in N'Djamena, to advise the politically inexperienced
rebels, ICG reported.
Deby then signed an agreement with Khartoum in November to establish
a joint task force to curb cross-border attacks and smuggling,
a deal which also allowed for the extradition of armed groups
from Chad.
In fact, the remoteness of the 1,350-km border with Sudan allows
not only the militias to regularly attack refugees on Chadian
territory but also the rebels to freely cross between the two
countries. JEM rebels, whose wives and families are among the
refugees, reportedly often cross the border into the Chadian half
of the border town of Tine (Tine Chad) to assemble.
One local humanitarian source told IRIN he saw a convoy of them
leave the town for Sudan in about 20 lorries at the end of January.
But Deby's perceived bias has led both rebel groups to demand
the presence of "international" observers as a precondition
to any peace negotiations.
"They [Chadians] don't have the authority to compel the Sudanese
government to act," JEM spokesman Abu Bakr Hamid al-Nur,
told IRIN in Tine Chad, adding that observers from the UK, US,
France or neighbouring African countries should be involved in
future talks.
"Even the Sudanese don't believe in the Chadian mediating
role," said Dobian Assingar, the vice-president of the International
Federation for Human Rights in Chad and president of the Chadian
League for Human Rights. "Sudan doesn't believe in the mediation
efforts started by Chad. Chad knows that Sudan doesn't believe
in it, but is trying to continue to give itself a good image."
ETHNIC TIES ON BOTH SIDES OF BORDER
According to the last Chadian census in 1993, of the 16 ethnic
groups that straddle the border, 78,000 Zaghawah, 50,000 Masalit
and over 760,000 members of nomadic Arab tribes live in Chad.
The Sudanese counterparts of all these groups are prime movers
in the Darfur conflict.
The groups share common resources, history, culture, family ties,
and remain close, with a great degree of toing and froing across
the dividing line. In Tine, just a dry river bed separates the
Chadian and Sudanese Zaghawah, allowing them to share both water
points and marriage ties.
"Even we can't distinguish between them. A man can have two
wives, one in Chad, one in Sudan," a local official with
the Chadian Red Cross, Abu Bakr Muhammad Sha'ib, told IRIN.
The ethnic nature of the devastating attacks in Darfur, in which
mainly the Fur, Masalit and Zaghawah - from which the rebels emerged
- are systematically being attacked, killed, forced off their
land, abducted and raped by Arab militias and the Sudanese army,
means that emotions are running high among their Chadian neighbours.
In both Darfur and Chad, numerous people told IRIN that kin on
the Chadian side of the border were helping their "brothers"
in Sudan, with Chadian Arabs - travelling from as far away as
Biltine and Ati - helping the militias, and the Zaghawah helping
the rebels.
(Many of the Zaghawah refugees who have fled from Darfur are actually
Chadians who fled to Sudan to escape Chad's incessant civil wars
and insurrections since independence in 1960.)
The
vice-chairman of the exiled political and military movement, the
Sudan Federal Democratic Alliance, Dr Sharif Harir, who is from
Darfur, told IRIN that social systems in the region were built
on "kinship and blood" and that there was an obligation
to help one other.
"The Arabs come from Chad and join their brothers in Sudan.
Their goal is to form Arab unity," said Abd al-Karim Abbakar
Anaw, a Sudanese chief, now a refugee in Kourbileke on the Chadian
side of the border. "When the rebels catch the Arabs, they
tell them they're from Chad."
A local aid worker in Tine Chad told IRIN there was no doubt that
some Zaghawah from Chad were also helping their neighbours. "The
locals are more than angry, because they are relatives. They have
relatives in Sudan - fathers, brothers, uncles and they are all
coming back wounded."
"It's a tribal problem. Black with black, Arab with Arab.
We are neighbours, one brother is here, one brother is there.
Without doubt if the brother is a victim of aggression, the other
will come to help," said a Sudanese teacher in Kourbileke,
Muhammad Husayn Ali. He said up to 2,000 Zaghawah from Chad were
currently helping the rebels in Darfur.
A local source from the Chadian town of Guereda told IRIN that
of 180 Zaghawah from the area had gone to Darfur to fight last
December, only 15 had returned alive.
Proof is hard to come by, rumours are rife, and the various groups
involved in the fighting are quick to accuse their enemies of
receiving outside help. "It's an open question to what degree
the Chadian Zaghawah are helping. Also whether the Arabs are doing
the same. The Arabs in Chad don't necessarily want to be used
by Khartoum," commented a regional analyst. He warned that
significant involvement of Chadian counterparts in Darfur would
"lead to a parallel face-off and more cross-border attacks".
Whether or not they are supplying manpower, at the very least
the influential Zaghawah business community in Sudan, Chad and
elsewhere is supporting the rebels financially, say observers.
"There were contributions here [N'Djamena] to help our brothers
in Darfur," a Zaghawah businessman who was formerly an army
officer told IRIN. "Some of them [the rebels] came here to
N'Djamena to procure arms. I don't know how much we collected,
but it's true that Chad is supporting Darfur."
There are also suggestions that the Darfur rebels may enjoy significant
support from the Zaghawah - many of them Sudanese - who dominate
Chad s top army brass and upper ranks of the presidential guard.
"Certain elements of the presidential guard of President
Deby may be participating in the conflict, because the rebels
are their cousins," said a senior army officer. "You
have to understand that the Zaghawah officers are the biggest
group in the army with arms and men under them," he added.
Deby's
Precarious Balancing Act
According to observers, Deby is caught between his ethic
affinity with his minority Zaghawah support base in Sudan and
Chad - which put him into power - and his relationship with militarily
powerful Khartoum.
In recent months, his position has become increasingly precarious,
not least following the judicial executions in November of four
men convicted of the murder in Chad of a Sudanese member of parliament
and head of the Chad Petroleum Company, who was also reportedly
close to Bashir.
The man found guilty of masterminding the killing, a prominent
Zaghawah, had expected impunity and appealed for a presidential
pardon. But Deby, who was involved in mediating in Darfur at the
time, decided his interests lay more with Sudan, a regional analyst
told IRIN. So the execution was carried out within weeks of the
verdict, and for the first time since 1991.
In a country rife with cronyism among the Zaghawah elite, "it
is very rare for a Zaghawah to be prosecuted and punished for
anything", said the analyst. "The Zaghawah have come
to expect impunity."
The ruling against his kin alienated many of Deby's supporters,
who believe their backing of
his 1990 coup obliges him to help them in their struggle against
Khartoum.
But maintaining good relations with Sudan, at least on the surface,
has taken precedence, say observers.
When Sudanese bombs were dropped on the border town of Tine Chad,
killing three and injuring 15 Chadian civilians on 29 January,
the Chadian government was at pains to play down the "incident".
Chad's foreign minister, Nagoum Yamassoum, reportedly said it
was "in no way a deliberate act". "We do not want
to speak of a deliberate act of provocation to bring the war towards
Chad."
Speaking about Darfur a day later on national radio, Deby placed
the blame for Darfur's woes on the rebels. "The rebels have
to accept the rule of law in order for Darfur to become peaceful,"
he said.
"He [Deby] can't afford a falling-out with Sudan," said
a regional analyst. "If he supports his clansmen openly,
Sudan will come down on him like a tonne of bricks. If he does
it covertly, he risks taking the war home with him."
If a regional war broke out, it is not clear whether Deby - whose
health is increasingly bad - would survive politically, he continued.
Deby is also mindful, according to some analysts, that if he upsets
Khartoum, Chadian rebels based in Sudan might enjoy increased
support from their hosts. According to Africa Confidential, Sudan
is already backing several hundred Chadian fighters based in the
Darfur region.
So the "balancing act" continues.
"Both countries deal hypocritically with each other. They
refuse to say it officially, but each is using rebels [the Darfur
rebels and the militias] to attack the other," said Assingar,
the Chadian human rights activist.
"I am scared that the conflict will destabilise the relative
peace we have in Chad now, and I call on both countries to stop
their hypocrisy and to avoid a war that will cause thousands of
deaths for nothing."
02
/ 08 / 2004
"Independent
radio station closed, director beaten up"
The
authorities in southern Chad have closed Radio Brakos, an independent
radio station in the small town of Moissala, after it broadcast
an interview with an opposition politician, sources in Moissala
told IRIN.
Local police occupied the radio station on 9 February and beat
up its director, Vatankah Tchanguis, the sources said.
Tchanguis, an Iranian who has lived in Chad for the past 20 years,
was then detained for 48 hours and then released without charge.
The sources said that more than a week after his release Tchanguis
was still interned in Moissala district hospital, recovering from
his injuries. These included head wounds and a bleeding eye.
Moissala is a small town near the frontier with Central African
Republic, 600 km south of the capital N'Djamena.
The Union of Private Radios in Chad and several press freedom
watchdogs, including the New York-based Committee for the Protection
of Journalists and Kinshasa-based Journalists in Danger, have
protested at the closure of Radio Brakos and the harsh treatment
meted out to its director.
The sources in Moissala told IRIN that Radio Brakos had been closed
and Tchanguis had been beaten on the orders of the local prefect
Bouba Dalissou.
This is the latest in a series of measures taken by the government
of President Idriss Deby to curb criticicism in the media.
Last October the government closed down the N'Djamena radio station
FM Liberte after it compared Deby's authoritarian rule to that
of his predecessor Hissene Hibre. Both men came to power through
military coups.
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