N’Djamena – General Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno on Monday appointed by decree 104 more members of his “parliament” as he leads Chad’s two-year transitional government after taking power on the death of his father.
A national forum for reconciliation last month recommended boosting the number of members of the National Transition Council (CNT), which operates as a de facto parliament, from 93 to 197.
In the decree seen by AFP, general Deby appointed the 104 “additional members of the CNT”, including former opposition party figures who have joined the regime, rebels who signed a peace deal in August and civil society representatives.
Much of the opposition and the most powerful armed rebel groups however boycotted the forum, protesting the “dynastic succession”.
The 38-year-old five-star general took the helm in April 2021 after his father, Chad’s iron-fisted ruler for three decades, was killed during an operation against jihadist rebels.
BREAKING: #BNNChad Reports.
General Deby, the head of the Junta, selected the 104 “extra members of the CNT,” which also included representatives from civil society and former members of the opposition party who have now joined the junta. #Chad #Politics pic.twitter.com/lG4KqJbDof
— Gurbaksh Singh Chahal (@gchahal) November 7, 2022
The junta had declared it would restore civilian rule after 18 months in power, and Deby had at first promised he would not take part in the future elections.
But as the 18-month deadline neared, the nationwide forum staged by Deby reset the clock, approving a new 24-month timeframe for holding elections, naming him “transitional president” and declaring he could be a candidate in the poll.
The CNT is tasked with drawing up a new constitution and preparing the election.
On October 20, the authorities put down opposition protests officially leaving 50 people dead, 300 wounded and hundreds detained.
The European Union strongly condemned an “excessive use of force” and violation of the right to freedom of speech and assembly.
A semi-desert country in central western Africa, Chad has been chronically unstable since it gained independence from France in 1960.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Source: AFP
Picture: Twitter/@OnuTchad
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com