Document #1347782
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
1) There is no information presently
available to the IRBDC regarding the existence of a "black list" of
President Habre's opponents.
2) In 1987, as Commander in Chief of the
Chadian Armed Forces, Hassan Djamous, victoriously re-conquered
Chadian territory which was occupied by Libya. [Foreign Broadcast
Information Service, Daily Report Sub-Sahara Africa,
Washington: FBIS-Afr-89-064, 5 April 1989, p.1.] He was wounded in
the head on 22 March 1987, while leading an attack on the Libyan
Air Force base at Ouadi Duom. [ibid.] Information contained within
these reports states that Hassan Djamous was the Commander in Chief
of the Chadian Armed Forces until April 1989. [ibid.]
3) According to the FBIS report, during the
weekend of 1-2 April 1989, four top government officials from the
Zakhawas ethnic group in the Biltine region on the border with
Sudan, attempted an unsuccessful coup in Ndjamena, the capital of
Chad. The only visible element of the coup was the movement of
troops in Ndjamena; no reports of gunfire were reported and life
returned to normal on the following Monday, 3 April 1989.
[FBIS-AFR-89-065, 6 April 1989, p.2.]
The four coup plotters were high ranking
government officials, two of whom, Hassan Djamous and Mahamat Itno,
had been considered faithful to President Hissein Habre. [ibid.]
Mahamat Itno, the Interior Minister had spearheaded a
reconciliation campaign which had resulted in numerous opposition
figures rallying to the government during 1988. [Keesing's
Record of World Events - News Digest for April 1989, p.
36581.]
It was not till 14 April 1989 that the
government made its first statement regarding the coup, claiming to
have "put an end to this senseless adventure and annihilated this
band of traitors". [ibid.] Later it was announced that Mahamat Itno
had been arrested on 1 April and that Hassan Djamous had been
wounded and captured along with some fleeing troops in the central
Sudanese border on 10 April 1989. [ibid.] Idris Deby, the
Presidential Adviser, was initially reported to have been killed,
but later it was confirmed that he had escaped to Sudan and,
Chadian sources in Paris stated that he arrived in Libya on 29
April 1989. [ibid.]
On 6 April 1989, FBIS reported that an
active government search for Hassan Djamous and Idris Deby was
underway in the Biltine region of Chad. They were reported to have
fled Ndjamena in the company of an unspecified number of armed men.
[FBIS-AFR-89-065, 6 April 1989, p.2.]
4) Unconfirmed reports suggest that Hassan
Djamous and Idris Deby were helping to organize guerrilla
activities among the Zaghawa and the Hadjerai tribespeople in
central Chad, and across the border in Darfur, Sudan.
[FBIS-AFR-89-065, 6 April 1989, p.2.] There have been reports of
serious intertribal fighting in Darfur, where many hundreds of
people have reportedly been killed and their villages burned.
[Keesing's Record of World Events - News Digest for May
1989, p.36646.] The Sudanese government claims that three of
the coup leaders fled into Sudan and that Sudanese troops had been
dispatched to Darfur to halt incursions by Chadian government
troops pursuing the rebels. [Keesing's, April 1989, p.
36581.]
According to Africa Confidential, 14 April 1989, the coup
attempt was reportedly sparked off by the arrest and rumoured death
of Siddick Ali Fadoul, Hassan Djamous's brother-in-law, while in
custody in May 1988. President Habre had reportedly suspected him
of supplying information to the Libyans. Siddick Ali Fadoul's
brother, Hassan Fadoul, fled to Libya, and was subsequently
reported to be organizing anti-Habre guerrilla activities in the
Zaghawa heartland. [Keesing's, April 1989, p.36581.]
The coup leaders were reported to have
opposed the appointment of Acheikh ibn Oumar as Foreign Minister in
March 1989. [ibid.] He was the leader of the pro-Libyan
Comité D'Action Revolutionnaire CDR, against President
Habre's government. ["Chad: Habre at the Turning Point", Africa
Confidential, Vol.30 No.9., London: Miramoor Publications Ltd.,
28 April 1989.] Hassan Djamous, Idris Deby and Mahamat Itno
reportedly resented the way in which opposition leaders had been
awarded privileges for agreeing to reconcile with Habre's regime.
Hassan Djamous and Idris Deby, who had played leading roles in
arranging the alliance between the Zaghawa and the President's
Gorane tribe, felt that the policy of reconciliation had excluded
the Zaghawa from power. [Keesing's, April 1989,
p.36581.]
5) The BBC Summary of World Broadcasts
reported that Hassan Djamous, who had been wounded and captured
after fierce fighting with government troops, died of his wounds in
the Military Hospital in Ndjamena in April. The BBC states that
this event was not reported until 29 May 1989 by Agence France
Presse. ["Leader of Attempted Coup Reportedly Dead", BBC Summary of
World Broadcasts, 31 May 1989.]
There is no information presently available to the IRBDC pertaining
to the arrest or execution of Hassan Djamous' relatives and
friends, beyond the case of his brother-in-law and his cousin,
Mahamat Itno. ["Chad: New Constitution", New African,
(London: IC Publications, August 1989), pp.21-22.] Members of the
Chadian Nationalis' Rally, an opposition group issued a communique
in Brussles stating that after the Hadjerai, "it is now the turn of
the Zaghawa to be persecuted". [FBIS-AFR-89-065, 6 April 1989,
p.2.]
Attached please find excerpts form the
following documents:
George T. Kurian, Encyclopedia of
the Third World, Third Edition, Vol.I., (New York: Facts On
File, Inc., 1987), pp.393-407.
George E. Delury, ed., World
Encyclopedia of Political Systems and Parties, Vol.I., (New
York: Facts On File Publications, 1987), pp.184-188.
Foreign Broadcast Information Service,
Sub-Sahara Africa, Washington: FBIS, 5-6 April 1989.
Keesing's Record of World Events,
News Digest for April and May 1989.
Africa Confidential, London:
Miramoor Publications Ltd., 22 January-12 May 1989.
BBC Summary of World Broadcasts, 6 April
- 31 May 1989.
"Chad: New Constitution", New
African, (London: IC Publications, August 1989), pp.21-22.
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