By Our Correspondent, N'DJAMENA
Chad
Chadian leader, General Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno has pardoned 110 more people sentenced to jail terms following deadly protests against the regime last October, according to a decree seen by AFP on Monday.
Demonstrations against the
extension of Deby's transitional rule broke out last October in the capital
N'Djamena and several other towns.
Deby was proclaimed head of
state by the army in April 2021 after the death of his father, Idriss Deby
Itno, who was killed during anti-rebel operations after ruling for 30 years.
"Persons tried and
sentenced for acts of unauthorized assembly, intentional assault and battery,
arson, (and) destruction of property... following the events of October 20 ...
benefit from a presidential pardon," read the decree, signed by Deby.
More than 600 young men,
including at least 80 minors, were arrested in N'Djamena on October 20 and in
the following days, and then sent to a prison in the desert town of Koro Toro
more than 600 kilometers (370 miles) away.
After months of detention,
they were tried without legal representation.
More than half were sentenced
to prison terms, while the others were given suspended sentences or released.
Local and international rights
groups claimed that dozens or even hundreds of people were tortured or executed
on the way to Koro Toro, a claim denied by the authorities.
Mahamat El-Hadj Abba Nana,
public prosecutor at the N'Djamena Court of Appeal, told AFP that the 110
people pardoned had been tried and sentenced to between 18 months and five
years in prison in Koro Toro, N'Djamena and Moundou, the country's
second-largest city.
A total of 436 people
convicted of taking part in last October's protests have now been pardoned by
Chadian authorities in less than four months.
At the end of March, 259
demonstrators sentenced to prison terms were pardoned under a similar decree,
followed by a second wave of 67 people in May.
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