Military leader Mahamat Idris Deby, who seized power thee years ago, is tipped to win
06 May 2024 - 16:17
byMahamat Ramadane and Portia Crowe
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Chadian President Mahamat Idriss Deby casts his vote for the presidential elections in N’Djamena, Chad, on Monday. Picture: REUTERS/STRINGER
N’Djamena — Chadians lined up on Monday to vote three years after military leader Mahamat Idriss Deby seized power, in the first presidential election in Africa’s Sahel region since a wave of coups.
Analysts say Deby, who took over the day rebels killed his father, Idriss Deby, in April 2021, is most likely to win, though his chief opponent drew larger-than-expected crowds on the campaign trail.
Deby, who voted early on Monday in the capital, N’Djamena, has promised to bolster security, strengthen the rule of law and increase electricity production.
“Today I’m upholding a fourth commitment which was to complete the transition process launched in our country three years ago. It is now up to the people to vote massively to choose their president,” Deby said in a post on Facebook after voting.
About 8.5-million people registered to vote. Provisional results are expected by May 21 and final results by June 5. If no candidate wins more than 50% of the votes, a run-off will be held on June 22.
One voter in N’Djamena, Ahaya Khalil, said she was supporting Deby because he had promised to create jobs.
“Today is voting day, and thank God we’ve come to vote for our president of the republic. May God preserve him and our country,” she said. “We hope he’ll give our children jobs once he’s elected.”
The vote coincides with a temporary withdrawal of US troops from Chad, an important Western ally in a region of West and Central Africa courted by Russia and racked by jihadism.
Since replacing his father at the helm of the oil-producing country, Deby has remained close with former colonial power and longtime ally France.
While other junta-ruled Sahel countries, including Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, told Paris and other Western powers to withdraw and have turned to Moscow for support, Chad remains the last Sahel state with a substantial French military presence.
The US, however, announced a temporary withdrawal of at least some troops in April after an order by Chad’s air force chief that the US halt activities at an airbase.
Opposition concerns
The vote pits Deby against his prime minister, Succès Masra, previously a political opponent who fled into exile in 2022 but was allowed back a year later. Also running are former prime minister Albert Pahimi Padacke and seven other candidates.
Yaya Dillo, an opposition politician who had been expected to run against Deby despite coming from the same clan, was shot and killed in N’Djamena on February 28, the day the election date was announced.
Padacke has accused Masra of collaborating with Deby. But Masra has attracted large crowds to his own rallies.
Some opposition members and civil society groups have called for a boycott, citing concerns about possible vote-rigging. That has raised fears of potential violence.
“This presidential election is of capital importance for the country because an entire people aspires for change,” said Baniara Yoyana, a former minister and magistrate. “The process must be conducted with transparency to avoid any risk of confrontation.”
Some observers did not get their accreditations before the vote and were not given any reason for the refusal, Citizens’ Alliance for Elections, a platform that monitors the poll, said in a statement on Sunday.
One Deby supporter, however, said he expected no problems. “We want the election to go well and peacefully,” said Abdelkhader Sougui, a student. “My wish is to go out and vote the morning of May 6 to confirm our victory ... in the first round.”
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Chadians vote in first poll since series of coups
Military leader Mahamat Idris Deby, who seized power thee years ago, is tipped to win
N’Djamena — Chadians lined up on Monday to vote three years after military leader Mahamat Idriss Deby seized power, in the first presidential election in Africa’s Sahel region since a wave of coups.
Analysts say Deby, who took over the day rebels killed his father, Idriss Deby, in April 2021, is most likely to win, though his chief opponent drew larger-than-expected crowds on the campaign trail.
Deby, who voted early on Monday in the capital, N’Djamena, has promised to bolster security, strengthen the rule of law and increase electricity production.
“Today I’m upholding a fourth commitment which was to complete the transition process launched in our country three years ago. It is now up to the people to vote massively to choose their president,” Deby said in a post on Facebook after voting.
About 8.5-million people registered to vote. Provisional results are expected by May 21 and final results by June 5. If no candidate wins more than 50% of the votes, a run-off will be held on June 22.
One voter in N’Djamena, Ahaya Khalil, said she was supporting Deby because he had promised to create jobs.
“Today is voting day, and thank God we’ve come to vote for our president of the republic. May God preserve him and our country,” she said. “We hope he’ll give our children jobs once he’s elected.”
The vote coincides with a temporary withdrawal of US troops from Chad, an important Western ally in a region of West and Central Africa courted by Russia and racked by jihadism.
Since replacing his father at the helm of the oil-producing country, Deby has remained close with former colonial power and longtime ally France.
While other junta-ruled Sahel countries, including Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, told Paris and other Western powers to withdraw and have turned to Moscow for support, Chad remains the last Sahel state with a substantial French military presence.
The US, however, announced a temporary withdrawal of at least some troops in April after an order by Chad’s air force chief that the US halt activities at an airbase.
Opposition concerns
The vote pits Deby against his prime minister, Succès Masra, previously a political opponent who fled into exile in 2022 but was allowed back a year later. Also running are former prime minister Albert Pahimi Padacke and seven other candidates.
Yaya Dillo, an opposition politician who had been expected to run against Deby despite coming from the same clan, was shot and killed in N’Djamena on February 28, the day the election date was announced.
Padacke has accused Masra of collaborating with Deby. But Masra has attracted large crowds to his own rallies.
Some opposition members and civil society groups have called for a boycott, citing concerns about possible vote-rigging. That has raised fears of potential violence.
“This presidential election is of capital importance for the country because an entire people aspires for change,” said Baniara Yoyana, a former minister and magistrate. “The process must be conducted with transparency to avoid any risk of confrontation.”
Some observers did not get their accreditations before the vote and were not given any reason for the refusal, Citizens’ Alliance for Elections, a platform that monitors the poll, said in a statement on Sunday.
One Deby supporter, however, said he expected no problems. “We want the election to go well and peacefully,” said Abdelkhader Sougui, a student. “My wish is to go out and vote the morning of May 6 to confirm our victory ... in the first round.”
Reuters
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