Libreville – Security forces in eastern Chad killed at least 13 demonstrators, including a 12-year-old boy, who were protesting peacefully at a time of ethnic friction in their region, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on Wednesday.
People in the town of Abeche rallied against a plan to inaugurate an official who comes from the Arab community at a site reputedly reserved for the sultan of the native Ouaddaien community.
On January 24, thousands of protesters were violently dispersed by soldiers, who killed three people and injured at least 40 others, HRW said in a joint statement with the Chadian Convention for the Defence of Human Rights (CTDDH).
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The following day, at a funeral for those who had died, “soldiers indiscriminately shot live rounds again, killing an additional 10 people and injuring at least 40 others,” they said.
A total of 212 people were arrested and held for up to five days before being released, sometimes enduring beatings and inhumane conditions, they said.
The account is based on interviews with witnesses, two doctors and representatives of civil society groups, as well as videos and photographs, the two groups said.
Their toll compares with an account given by a government official to AFP on January 28, who said 14 people had been killed and 64 wounded.
Communications Minister Abderaman Koulamallah, who was also appointed government spokesman by the military junta which took power 10 months ago, told AFP on Wednesday, “The army didn’t fire on anyone”.
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“The army tried to establish order in a violent demonstration in which civilians used weapons, people were killed and property destroyed. The army reacted proportionately,” he said.
He added, however, “an enquiry has been opened to establish responsibility. HRW would do well to wait for the outcome”.
A vast landlocked country in north-central Africa, Chad has a history of sporadic ethnic friction.
The Ouaddai is a vast semi-desert region near the border with Sudan that was once the heartland of the Ouaddai Sultanate, an empire that existed for nearly three centuries until it was conquered by France in the early 20th century.
Arabs many of them descendants of nomads and dark-skinned Ouaddaiens tend to live in separate areas and confrontations are rare.
However, the provincial capital of Abeche, where the historic sites are located, is a potential flashpoint.
The protests in January erupted over inaugural ceremonies that were scheduled to be held for a district chief, Bachar Younous, who hails from the Arab community.
He became head of Abeche district in 2019 but had never had an official ceremony to confirm his appointment.
The first choice for the inauguration the site of a historic royal palace was discarded after the Ouaddai community complained that it was used by their traditional sultan.
The violence erupted when a second venue the city’s Independence Square, which opponents said was also used by the sultan was announced.
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Source: AFP
Picture: Getty Images
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