Chad junta chief says to contest May 6 presidential vote

Chad junta chief says to contest May 6 presidential vote

N’DJAMENA, March 4 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Chad’s junta leader Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno said he would stand in the May 6 presidential election, just three days after his chief rival was killed in murky circumstances.

Deby Itno took power in 2021 after his father, veteran leader Idriss Deby Itno, died while fighting rebels. The iron-fisted ruler had led the Sahel country for more than three decades.

“I, Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno, am a candidate for the 2024 presidential election under the banner of the For a United Chad coalition,” the military leader said in a speech.

Deby Itno was proclaimed transitional president by the junta in 2021 and promised a return to civilian rule and elections within 18 months.

But he subsequently extended the transition by two years and protests against the decision were brutally repressed by the security forces in October 2022.

The date of the May presidential election was announced on Tuesday, barely two months before the vote.

Deby Itno, 39, is almost certain to win, given that his main challenger has been assassinated and the opposition has been muzzled and repressed.

On Wednesday, Deby Itno’s cousin and main political rival, opposition leader Yaya Dillo Djerou, was killed after troops surrounded the office of his Socialist Party Without Borders in the capital N’Djamena.

His party accused soldiers of shooting Dillo dead at point-blank range in an “execution” before the election, in which he planned to challenge Deby Itno.

The government has rejected the accusations, saying Dillo “opposed his arrest” and fired on security forces.

Speaking on Saturday from the foreign ministry headquarters and surrounded by troops, Deby Itno claimed that when he seized power in 2021 the army had “saved the country from the abyss and from chaos”.

Dressed all in white, he was cheered by hundreds of representatives of the political groups that make up the For a United Chad coalition. The coalition claims it comprises “221 parties”. — NNN-AGENCIES

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