N'DJAMENA, Chad
A group of 380 rebels handed life sentences over the 2021 death of former ruler Idriss Deby Itno have been pardoned, a statement from the president's office said Saturday.
More than 400 rebels had been
sentenced Tuesday following a mass trial for "acts of terrorism,
mercenarism, recruitment of child soldiers and assaulting the head of
state".
The trial had opened last
month behind closed doors at Klessoum prison, 20 kilometres southeast of the
capital N'djamena.
But a statement Saturday from
the office of transitional president General Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno, one of
the former ruler's sons, said 380 had received a presidential pardon.
Contacted by AFP, one of the
lawyers for the defendants, Francis Lokoulde, spoke of his "relief"
at the news.
The exiled head of the
country's main rebel group FACT, Mahamat Mahdi Ali, who was tried and convicted
along with 55 other members of the organisation, was not included in the
pardon, he added.
Government spokesperson Aziz
Mahamat Saleh said Deby's decision for clemency coincided with the Muslims'
holy month of Ramadan.
"It is, in my opinion, a
strong act, one that has an important symbolism for the Chadian nation, to
really allow to be able to rebuild on new bases," he said.
In early 2021, the Front for
Change and Concord in Chad (FACT), launched an offensive on the north of the country
from bases in Libya.
On 20 April, the army
announced that the elder Deby Itno, Chad's ruler for the previous three
decades, had died from wounds sustained in the fighting.
His death was announced just a
day after he had been declared victor of a presidential election that gave him
a sixth term in office.
He was immediately succeeded
by his son at the head of a 15-member military junta.
While General Mahamat Idriss
Deby Itno promised to hold democratic elections after 18 months –
which would have fallen in October 2022 – he announced that a vote
would not be held for another two years.
This lead to violent anti-government protests in which at least 60
people died, hundreds were arrested.
The main leaders of Chad's
opposition now live in hiding or in exile, even though the junta lifted a suspension
of several opposition parties in January.
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