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Africa charity workers charged with kidnapping

French group allegedly falsely portrayed 103 kids as injured Darfur orphans

Image: French charity Zoe's Ark and some of the 16 Europeans charged with kidnapping in Chad
Eric Breteau, left, president of the French charity Zoe's Ark, and some of the 16 other Europeans charged in connection with the alleged attempt to kidnap more than 100 African children, are shown Tuesday at the justice court in Abeche, Chad.
Sonia Rolley / AFP - Getty Images
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updated 3:43 p.m. ET Oct. 30, 2007

N'DJAMENA, Chad - Chad has charged six French citizens with kidnapping after they tried to fly out 103 African children from the remote borderlands with Sudan, bandaging the children up to make them look injured and claiming they were Darfur orphans in need of rescue.

The case threatens to impede aid efforts helping hundreds of thousands of Darfur refugees as it is likely to intensify already deep local suspicions about the goodwill of humanitarian workers.

Seventeen Europeans have been detained since Thursday after authorities scotched an attempt by a French group calling itself Zoe's Ark to fly the African children to Europe, where the group said it intended to place them with host families.

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The French Foreign Ministry and others have cast doubt on the claims by the little-known group that the children are Darfur orphans.

"According to initial information ... there seem to be many Chadian children and even many who are not orphans," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Pascale Andreani told reporters in Paris on Tuesday.

If convicted, the six French nationals charged late Monday face up to 20 years in Chadian prison with hard labor, said Interior Minister Ahmat Bachir.

Journalists, flight crew also charged
Three French journalists traveling with the Zoe's Ark members and a seven-member flight crew were charged with complicity in the alleged crime, Justice Minister Pahimi Padacket Albert said.

Two of the journalists were covering the operation and a third was apparently present for personal reasons, according to the media watchdog group Reporters Without Borders. A Belgian pilot is also under detention, but hasn't been charged with any crime.

Far more is at stake than the fates of the accused French nationals.

More than 300,000 Darfur refugees are living in camps along the Sudanese border, having fled four years of conflict that has left more than 200,000 people dead and 2.5 million displaced from their homes. The terrain along the edge of the Sahara Desert where the Darfur refugees are squatting is among the remotest and least hospitable anywhere.

Aid groups operate in Chad at the pleasure of the government of President Idriss Deby, who expressed outrage at the group's activities in his country and may crack down on humanitarian efforts as a result of the alleged kidnapping.

Deby was "shocked by the acts of Zoe's Ark, which is trafficking children under cover of humanitarian assistance," according to a statement posted on the government's Web site.

The European Union is also aiming to deploy 3,000 peacekeepers to help protect refugees in Chad and nearby Central African Republic, where rebel elements operate and banditry is rife.

However, Chad has assured France that the debacle will not affect that plan, a French official said Monday.

Major embarrassment for France
The Zoe's Ark affair has been a major embarrassment for France, which was Chad's colonial master till 1960, and has long and deep ties in the volatile region. New President Nicolas Sarkozy has said he wants to move beyond France's historical role in Africa, which saw successive administrations cozying up to dictators in African countries where France had big business interests.

French Prime Minister Francois Fillon on Tuesday called the group "condemnable" and expressed hope that the case didn't discredit other non-governmental organizations doing "remarkable work" in Chad and Darfur — "and which now are suffering suspicion and violence."

Zoe's Ark was founded in 2005 by volunteer fireman Eric Breteau who said it was named after a girl orphaned by the Dec. 2004 Asian tsunami. The group, registered as a non-governmental organization with the French authorities, sought to aid children affected by the tsunami, and brought one boy to France for an operation.

According to their Web site, the group announced in April an operation for "evacuating orphans from Darfur." The group launched an appeal for support by host families and funding through Internet forums.


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