Chad’s exiled rebel leader, Timan Erdimi, has returned home after 17 years to participate in national talks planned to pave the way for a peaceful election after the military seized power last year.
Also, about 30 rebel and opposition factions had signed a peace pact with Chad’s transitional authorities last week, agreeing to join broader talks scheduled to begin on Saturday.
But the most powerful insurgent group, however, refused to participate.
It would be recalled that Erdimi, the nephew of former President Idriss Deby, left Chad in 2005 to lead an insurgency against his uncle’s government.
His forces almost toppled Deby in 2008, and his Union of Resistance Forces (UFR) has continued to threaten the government. In 2019, UFR-linked fighters advanced from Libya deep into Chadian territory before their convoy was destroyed by French fighter jets.
Deby’s son, Mahamat Idriss Deby, was installed by the military as interim president when his father was killed on the battlefield in April last year. The younger Deby initiated talks with various rebel groups who had long challenged his father’s regime.
However, Erdmimi who arrived by plane in the capital N’Djamena said he hoped the national dialogue would succeed in reuniting the country.
“I hope that everything will go well to achieve peace, reconciliation and serenity in the country”
The military junta led by Mahamat Idriss Deby said upon taking power that it would oversee an 18-month transition to democratic rule, but it has shown little sign of organising elections as that deadline nears.
But the Libya-based Front for Change and Concord in Chad (FACT), which threatened to march on N’Djamena last year, has refused to participate in the upcoming talks, saying negotiators did not listen to its demands.