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Rebels in Chad claim to take border town

Insurgents are also battling troops in capital as foreigners try to flee

Image: Unrest in Chad
The view from Chad's international airport on Sunday included a smoky skyline that reflected battles between rebels and government troops.
French Army Photo Service via AFP-Getty Images
updated 1:06 p.m. ET Feb. 3, 2008

NAIROBI, Kenya - Chadian rebels said they overwhelmed government troops Sunday and seized an eastern town in the Central African nation, an area housing more than 400,000 refugees along the border with Sudan’s war-ravaged Darfur region.

Rebel spokesman Abderaman Koulamallah said he had no other information because he had been fighting all day in N’Djamena, the capital, where rebels were battling for a second day to oust President Idriss Deby.

“We defeated the garrison there and took Adre at around 4 p.m.,” said Koulamallah.

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There was no way to confirm the rebel report.

The U.N. refugee agency has 12 camps in that area for 420,000 refugees from Darfur and Chadians displaced in the spillover from the violence in Sudan.

The rebels arrived on the capital’s outskirts Friday after a three-day push across the desert from Chad’s eastern border with Sudan. Backed by 250 pickup trucks mounted with machine guns, between 1,000 and 1,500 insurgents entered the city early Saturday, quickly spreading through the streets.

'Bloody and chaotic' in capital
"Nobody can say who will win," said a French military spokesman, Capt. Christophe Prazuck. France has a long-standing military presence in Chad, a former colony.

Prazuck said the fighting resumed around dawn Sunday, and government forces were using tanks and helicopter gunships to try to push out the rebels, who were battling back with assault weapons, rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns.

A foreign aid worker described the scene in N’Djamena on Sunday as “bloody and chaotic” with bodies littering the streets and looters breaking into shops during lulls in the fighting.

Gunfire could be heard coming from the area around the presidential palace, said the aid worker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk with reporters.

The U.S. State Department condemned the rebel’s attempt to seize power.

“We call for calm in the capital and support the (African Union’s) call for an immediate end to armed attacks and to refrain from violence that might harm innocent civilians,” spokesman Sean McCormack said.

The violence has endangered a $300 million global aid operation supporting millions in Chad, and also delayed the deployment of the European Union’s peacekeeping mission to both Chad and neighboring Central African Republic.

Oil fuels power struggles
Chad has been convulsed by civil wars and invasions since independence from France in 1960. The recent discovery of oil has only increased the intensity of the power struggles in the largely desert country, and another Chadian rebel group launched a failed assault on N’Djamena in 2006.

The rebels currently fighting in the city are believed to be a coalition of three groups. The biggest is led by Mahamat Nouri, a former diplomat who defected 16 months ago, and a nephew of Deby’s, Timan Erdimi. They have long been fighting to overthrow Deby, whom they accuse of corruption. Deby, himself a soldier, has seen many defect from the army, where morale is low.

The rebels are also angry with the president for not providing what they consider enough support to insurgents in Sudan’s Darfur region, some of whom are from Deby’s own tribe, the Zaghawa, who are found in both Chad and Sudan.

The African Union, holding a summit in Ethiopia, said it would not recognize the rebels should they seize power, and selected Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi and Republic of Congo President Denis Sassou-Nguesso to try to broker a peace deal.

Libya's official news agency, JANA, reported overnight that Nouri had agreed to a cease-fire Saturday after speaking to Gadhafi. But the rebels denied any truce had been struck.

France condemned the rebel push on the capital, and backed the African mediation effort.

The United Nations was temporarily evacuating Chad and the U.S. Embassy said it had authorized the departure of its nonessential staff.

China's foreign ministry said Sunday that most of its citizens had evacuated and only nine embassy staff and a few other Chinese remained in N'Djamena.

China has been expanding its presence in Africa in recent years in the pursuit of energy, natural resources for its growing economy, and markets for its goods.


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