Foreign

National Dialogue: Chad invites armed groups to participate in talks

On Tuesday, Chad’s interim president welcomed armed opposition organizations to take part in a national dialogue to determine the country’s future, reversing prior assertions that the administration would not speak with rebels.

The Transitional Military Council (CMT), led by Mahamat Idriss Deby, seized control. After his father, the former president, was slain while visiting troops battling an insurrection in the north, he was elected president in April.

Rebel groups were invited to take part in an “Inclusive National Dialogue”, before the holding of presidential and legislative elections, Deby said, without giving a timetable.

“The frank and sincere dialogue we all hope for will be open, in a specific manner, to the political-military movements,” Deby said in a speech.

“Petty practices, political calculations and rearguard battles that have already caused too much harm to our country must be banished forever.”

The junta has previously refused to negotiate with rebel groups, in particular the fighters from the Front for Change and Concord in Chad (FACT), which in April swept south from bases in Libya and reached within 300km of the capital N’Djamena.

Deby said armed groups have “a patriotic obligation to reconsider their positions” and to help the transitional council build national unity.

Chad is a key contributor to a multinational force in the Lake Chad basin fighting jihadist insurgency Boko Haram, which erupted in northeast Nigeria in 2009.

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