Thursday, May 7, 2009
Claire and Stephanie have been released!
Our hope is that the One who has heard us on behalf of Claire and Stephanie Jodoin to turn hearts of the leaders, will also intervene in Chad in this turbulent time.
Read the full article with pictures of Claire and Stephanie, and let us rejoice together!
Chadian army, rebels clash in east: government
"The first ground clashes have just taken place at Am-Deressa, 10 kilometres (six miles) south of Am-Dam," Communications Minister Mahamat Hissene said.
"The government forces gained the upper hand and mopping up operations are continuing."
He gave no casualty figures.
"There was violent fighting with the troops of (President Idriss) Deby, from 5:00 am (0400 GMT," rebel alliance spokesman Adberaman Koulamallah confirmed to AFP. "It was very violent. The fighting lasted for hours."
Koulamallah also claimed success, saying that the battle "turned in our favour. Government forces are completely routed. We occupy Am-Dam. The objective is still (the capital) Ndjamena."
Am-Dam is 110 kilometres north of Goz Beida and more than 100 kilometres south of Abeche, the two towns used as bases by most relief agencies working in east Chad to help 450,000 refugees and displaced people.
The UN refugee agency on Thursday said it has pulled all but two of 20 staff out of camps for 60,000 people because of instability caused by the insurgency since the rebels crossed into Chad from west Sudan on Monday.
The decision echoes one Wednesday by the UN World Food Programme in the same region, because three rebel forces were advancing across Chad from the eastern border, stating that their sights were set on the capital Ndjamena.
"All the other humanitarian agencies are going to do the same" because the situation is "too volatile and too unstable," Serge Male, representing the High Commissioner for Refugees in Chad, but he stressed that "we hope this won't last."
The UNHCR has meanwhile provided for "very short term" measures to keep about 20,000 Sudanese refugees at Koukou Angarana and about 40,000 Chadians displaced by previous internal conflicts, Male said.
The Chadian government has accused Sudan of backing the rebel assault that started on Monday, while the ink was scarcely dry on a peace pact between the fractious neighbours brokered in Doha by Qatar and Libya.
Rebels of the Union of Forces for Resistance (UFR) claimed in a statement that they captured government military vehicles during a brief land clash on Tuesday between Tizzi and Haraz Mangueigne.
Koulamallah claimed Thursday that the rebels had "more than a thousand vehicles," but said they had been attacked each day from the air by helicopters and bombers flying very high. "Our air defence works fine," he added. "That is not a problem."
The government has so far stated that it carried out one air attack on the rebels advancing across the hot, arid south of the central African country in four-by-four vehicles.
Diplomatic sources said that on Wednesday the rebels entered Am-Dam and Am-Timan, 180 kilometres south of Goz Beida, where they encountered no resistance.
However, the military activity, which follows a thwarted rebel bid last year to seize Ndjamena after they entered the capital, has led to mounting fears for some 450,000 refugees and displaced people in camps in eastern Chad.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon "is following developments in eastern Chad with increasing concern," the UN said in a statement late Wednesday, calling on Chad and Sudan to resume peace talks and urging respect for UN humanitarian operations.
Chadian Interior and Public Security Minister Ahmat Mahamat Bashir accused Sudanese President Omar El-Beshir of ordering "mercenaries" to attack Chad and vowed that the rebels would be wiped out.
Peace between Chad and Sudan is regarded as essential to any lasting settlement to a six-year-old uprising in Sudan's western Darfur region, where the Chadian rebels have rear bases.
In February last year, rebels battled their way to Ndjamena in western Chad in a bid to overthrow President Idiss Deby Itno before being beaten back with logistical help from some French forces.
Pray for peace in Chad.
Chadian Rebels Advance on the Capital
The spokesperson says there have been skirmishes between its forces and Chadian soldiers in the south-east of the country near the Sudanese and Central African Republic border. The rebels say they have destroyed 9 armored vehicles and captured 12 others.
Earlier this week, Chad accused Sudan of supporting an attack by the UFR. The Chadian rebels, who have bases in Sudan, reportedly crossed the border on Monday. The Sudan Tribune quoted Chad's Communications Minister Mahamat Hissene, who said the rebels had penetrated around 100 kilometers inside Chadian territory.
Sudan and Chad signed an agreement to normalize relations at the weekend in Doha, the capital of Qatar. Mr Hissene accused Sudan of sending armed forces across the border while "the ink has yet to dry on the Doha accord".
Today, May 7th, the Chad Minister of the Interior Ahmat Mahamat Bachir went on Chadian radio, saying that the rebels had been defeated. For their part, the rebels affirm that they are continuing to advance on the capital city. One thing is true, the fighting continues. Please pray for blessing on Chad in these tumultuous times, for Chadian families, aid workers, and other foreigners.
Click here to read the original article
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Please pray for Claire and Stephanie, held hostage in Sudan
The original article from the BBC can be found here.
Threat to kill two Sudan hostages
![]() Hundreds of thousands of people need aid in Darfur |
The kidnappers of two aid workers in Darfur say they will kill them, unless six French aid employees convicted of abducting children in Chad are retried.
Chad's pardons two years ago for the French aid staff, three months after they were jailed, sparked public anger.
The Aide Medicale Internationale staff, a French and a Canadian woman, were seized in south Darfur a week ago.
The kidnappers have also threatened to target French interests if their demands are not met.
Armed men kidnapped the pair from their compound in South Darfur's capital, Nyala, about 100km (65 miles) from the border with Chad on 4 April.
'Treated well'
The pair have been named as Canadian Stephanie Joidon and her French colleague, Claire Dubois.
One of the kidnappers, who named his group as the Falcons for the Liberation of Africa, told Reuters news agency by telephone: "We demand France open the case of the Zoe's Ark criminals and judge them through a fair court.
"If the French government is not serious in negotiations with us and does not respond to our request, we will kill the two aid workers."
In 2007, six employees of French humanitarian group Zoe's Ark were convicted of trying to fly more than 100 children out of Chad to Europe without authorisation.
The group, who denied the charges, were sentenced to eight years of hard labour by a Chadian court, but were pardoned in March 2008 by Chad's president.
The kidnappers allowed one of their captives to speak to media by satellite telephone on Sunday.
Ms Joidon told AFP news agency: "We are being treated well. We do not know where we are. We wish [our families] much courage. We hope that all ends well."
It was the second kidnapping of aid workers since the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant last month for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for alleged war crimes in Darfur.
Four workers with Medecins Sans Frontieres were kidnapped at gunpoint from their Darfur home on 11 March and later released.
Sudan expelled 13 aid agencies immediately after the indictment of Mr Bashir.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
A university rector savagely beaten by the police in Chad

"Peace I leave with you, my peace I give to you: not as the world gives, I give to you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid." - John 14:27
APA: Dr. Isaac Danadji, the Rector of the University of Moundou, was savagely beaten last Saturday by the police for using coal in the refectory of the University, APA learned from sources. Moundou is the economic capital of Chad, 450 km (280 mi) south of N'Djamena.
Charcoal use has been prohibited in Chad for three months by the authorities.
When informed of the use of charcoal at the university, heavily armed brigade troops for the protection of the environment raided the premises of the institution located about fifteen miles north of the town of Moundou.
The soldiers found two bags of coal, which they burned in the courtyard of the University, causing anger among the students.
The brigade fired shots into the air to stop the grumbling of students, causing a real disturbance on campus.
For daring to protest against such brute force, the rector was knocked out by the officers of the brigade who then copiously beat him before throwing him into the back of their truck like a bag of coal, barefoot.
Mr. Danadji was then imprisoned for several hours before being released, having been completely disfigured, according to testimonies of the students.
The same fate was reserved for the vice-rector, Dr Gaston Tarkoudjal, who wished to come to the aid of his supervisor.
Since this incident, all classes have been interrupted at the University of Moundou.
The original article in French is posted at tchadactuel.com