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Rebels in Chad claim to take border town


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Despite efforts to get foreigners out of the country, two Americans with U.S.-based group Stop Genocide were among about 50 people at N'Djamena's Le Meridien hotel when it was attacked Saturday, said the group's spokesman, Cory Preston.

In a blog for the organization's Web site, founder Gabriel Stauring described parts of the wall falling around him as French soldiers, who were guarding the hotel, traded fire with unknown gunmen.

French officials said foreigners wishing to leave Chad were being transferred to Libreville, Gabon, starting Saturday night. Nearly 400 had been evacuated by midday Sunday, and about 600 were gathered at safety points guarded by French soldiers, said the military spokesman, Prazuck.

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France's military has about 1,400 personnel in Chad, including 1,200 in the capital. Paris sent more troops Thursday to boost its presence, although Prazuck said six Mirage fighter jets based in N'Djamena were ordered out of the city Sunday to prevent their being damaged in the fighting.

France's role unclear
It was not clear if French forces would intervene to stop the fighting — a move that could jeopardize the planned EU peacekeeping mission to the country.

"If they were to intervene, the neutrality of the European intervention in Chad is over and it would blow France's policy on European defense," said Roland Marchal, a Chad expert and researcher at the French Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Internationales.

Chad's government might be getting less help from France than it did during previous rebel attacks, said Henri Boshoff, a military analyst at the Institute for Security Studies in Pretoria, South Africa.

Previously, "the French gave them intelligence using aerial reconnaissance, and that allowed the Chad government to act," Boshoff told The Associated Press. "But it looks like this time it's too late, the rebels got too close."

The difference could be that former President Jacques Chirac had tried to project the image of France as a friendly protector on the African continent. The new president, Nicolas Sarkozy, has called for a "healthier relationship," saying it would not be business as usual with France's old corrupt allies on the continent.

The most recent rebellions in Chad began in 2005 in the east, erupting at the same time as the conflict in Sudan's western region of Darfur. The governments of Chad and Sudan accuse one another of backing the other's rebel groups.

Deby came to power at the head of a rebellion in 1990; he has won elections since, but none deemed free or fair. He brought a semblance of peace after three decades of civil war and an invasion by Libya, but became increasingly isolated.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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