Chad: Attack on military base kills at least 40 soldiers

FILE - Chadian President Mahamat Deby Itno participates in his inauguration ceremony in N'djamena, Chad, Thursday, May 23, 2024. (AP Photo/Mouta Ali, File)
Chadian President Mahamat Deby Itno

N’DJAMENA, Oct 29 (NNN-AGENCIES) — At least 40 Chadian soldiers were killed after their base was attacked on Sunday evening, the presidency says.

President Mahamat Déby has ordered a counter-mission to track down the culprits, according to a statement from his office.

The attack reportedly happened on an island called Barkaram, in a vast marshy region that was once covered by the waters of Lake Chad before its dramatic shrinking in recent decades.

No suspects for Sunday’s attack are named in the presidency’s statement, but the area is close to the border zones of Nigeria and Niger where militants are known to operate.

Latest UN figures indicate more than 220,000 people have been forced from their homes following years of insecurity and violence from armed groups.

Sunday’s attack is one of the worst suffered by Chadian soldiers since 2020, when about 100 soldiers died in a raid which prompted then-President Idriss Déby to launch an operation against militants.

The attackers had time to seize ammunition and equipment before they left.

It is a blow to President Déby, who is an elite soldier by training, and the son of the former president who was killed three years ago in battle with rebels close to the Libyan border.

In its public communications the Chadian presidency has presented Déby as a hands-on leader with military nous, who visited the site of the attack early on Monday, “assessing the situation on the ground, paying his respects to the deceased soldiers, showing his compassion to the wounded, and lifting the morale of his brothers-in-arms”.

The Lake Chad basin is bordered by Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria – all of which are part of a Multinational Joint Task Force that seeks to stamp out the armed groups operating in the region.

In recent years, there have been several coups in the region, in Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso. The military in each country cited the inability to deal with the militant threat as one of the reasons for the ouster of the civilian governments.

Chad has reportedly become a key conduit for arms flowing into Sudan, though it denies this, and is hosting large numbers of refugees from Sudan’s civil war in camps near its eastern border. — NNN-AGENCIES

administrator

Related Articles