N'DJAMENA, Chad
Chad's military rulers on Thursday announced a general amnesty ending prosecution and guilty verdicts over the deaths of hundreds of protesters in a 2022 anti-government rally, a minister told AFP.
The opposition and NGOs have
previously denounced the amnesty as a move by the government to shield the
police and military officers responsible for the killings from justice.
Chad's
government-appointed parliament, the National Transitional Council, adopted the
law with 92.4 percent of members voting in favour, said National Reconciliation
Minister Abderaman Koulamallah.
The law is part of a
commitment to "national reconciliation" and applies "to all
Chadians, civilians and soldiers", according to the text seen by AFP.
Hundreds of demonstrators
poured onto the streets of the semi-desert country on October 20, 2022, mainly
youths protesting against a move by military president Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno
to cling to power.
About 50 people, according to the government, or at least 300 according to the opposition and independent observers, were killed by police and military fire in the capital N'Djamena.
After the demonstrations on
what the opposition calls "Black Thursday", the regime said 621
youths, including 83 minors, were detained at an infamous desert jail at Koro
Toro, 600 kilometres (370 miles) from the capital.
Most were convicted and
sentenced to prison in a mass trial, before being pardoned by Deby.
Local and international NGOs
as well as UN-mandated experts estimate that 1,000-2,000 were arrested. Dozens
if not hundreds of them have since disappeared.
"Despite the authorities'
immediate promise of an inquiry, all we have seen up to now is unfair trials
behind closed doors of demonstrators and the absence of serious investigations
into the alleged perpetrators of the killings," Amnesty
International said in October 2023, on the one-year anniversary of the
protests.
Mahamat Deby, a general, was
proclaimed transitional president by the army on April 20, 2021 following the
death of his father, Idriss Deby Itno, who had run Chad as a dictator for 30
years and was killed by rebels while visiting frontline troops.
Deby had promised elections
within 18 months, but after that date passed he put off a vote for another two
years, sparking the deadly protests.
A referendum on a new
constitution is scheduled for December 17 and is due to set the stage for
"free" elections and a return to civilian rule.
The vast majority of
opposition parties are calling for a boycott of the vote.
No comments:
Post a Comment