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  • World - Africa
  • Updated: April 20, 2021

Chad's President, Idriss Deby Dies After Fighting Rebels

Chad's President, Idriss Deby Dies After Fighting Rebels

Source: Channels Television

The newly re-elected Chad President, Idriss Deby Itno, has died of injuries while fighting rebels in the north of the Sahel Country.

Idriss Deby died on Tuesday, a day after he won re-election for a sixth term in office.

Army spokesperson General Azem Bermandoa Aguona in a statement read out on state television said the 68 year old, “has just breathed his last defending the sovereign nation on the battlefield.”

He has been in power for three decades.

Late Chad president

Deby was re-elected on Monday to a sixth term with 79.32 percent in the April 11’s vote, provisional results showed on Monday, hours after the army said it had killed 300 fighters waging a rebel offensive launched on election day.

READ ALSO: AU Set To Deploy 3,000 Soldiers To Mali, Chad, Others

He ruled for three decades and his re-election was never in serious doubt, with a divided opposition, boycott calls, and a campaign in which demonstrations were banned or dispersed.

According to the provisional figures announced by the Independent National Electoral Commission chairman, Kodi Mahamat Bam, Former Prime Minister, Albert Pahimi Padacke, came in second with just 10.32 percent and the turnout was 64.81 percent.

The first female presidential candidate in the history of the country, Lydie Beassemda, came third with 3.61 percent.

Officially nine candidates were running against Deby, but three withdrew and called for the vote to be boycotted, blasting the violent repression of peaceful opposition rallies. However, the Supreme Court kept their names on the ballots.

Supporters and activists of Deby’s party the Patriotic Salvation Movement celebrated the results, singing and dancing in the central square of the capital N’Djamena.

“We are celebrating a great victory in the first round, but also seriously on our minds are our brothers, our comrades, soldiers of the Chadian army who fell on the field,” the party’s secretary-general Mahamat Zen Bada said.

Deby is a key ally in the West’s anti-jihadist campaign in the Sahel and he campaigned on a promise of bringing peace and security to the region.

But on election day, a heavily armed rebel group launched an incursion into Chad’s north from its rear base in Libya.

On Monday, Chad’s army said it had it had killed more than 300 rebels, capturing 150 more, and lost five soldiers in the eight days of fighting.

The government meanwhile sought to assure concerned residents that the offensive was over and calm had been restored.

The rebel raid in the provinces of Tibesti and Kanem was carried out by the Front for Change and Concord in Chad (FACT), based in Libya.

The group has a non-aggression pact with Khalifa Haftar, a military strongman who controls much of Libya’s east.

While the government had said Saturday that the rebel offensive was over, fighting had in fact resumed Sunday afternoon, army spokesman General Azem Bermandoa Agouna said.

“The situation is now calm on the front,” he told AFP on Monday.

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