Chad: Rebel Offensive
Poses Risk of Ethnic Reprisal
Human Rights
Watch (Washington, DC)
PRESS RELEASE
April 13, 2006
Posted to the web April 13, 2006
New York
The Chadian government, rebel groups,
and their backers in Khartoum must ensure that their forces do not attack civilians
or target ethnic groups, Human Rights Watch said today. Rebels seeking to oust
Chadian President Idriss Déby entered the capital N'Djamena in the morning
of April 13.
Civilians at risk include the 200,000
Sudanese refugees living in camps in eastern Chad, where fighting continues
along the border. Also at risk are members of the Zaghawa ethnic group, a cross-border
minority in Chad and Sudan that has been targeted by the Sudanese government
and its "Janjaweed" militia in Darfur.
"Rebel and government commanders alike
must order their forces to protect all civilians, regardless of ethnicity,"
said Peter Takirambudde, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "Attacking civilians
and targeting ethnic groups are forbidden under the laws of war."
International humanitarian law, specifically
Protocol II to the Geneva Conventions on internal armed conflicts, which Chad
ratified in 1997, prohibits both government forces and rebel groups from conducting
attacks on civilians and targeting persons based on ethnicity. Article 13 states
that "the civilian population and individual civilians shall enjoy general protection
against the dangers arising from military operations" and "shall not be the
object of attack. Acts or threats of violence the primary purpose of which is
to spread terror among the civilian population are prohibited."
The main offensive on N'Djamena appears
to be led by a Chadian rebel coalition, the Front Unique pour le Changement
Démocratique au Tchad (FUC), based in neighboring Darfur and supported
by the Sudanese government.
The offensive on the capital has so far
largely bypassed the refugee camps in eastern Chad. However, if Chadian rebels
allied with Khartoum take control of the border region, the refugee camps may
be vulnerable to attack from the Sudanese government-backed Janjaweed militia,
who have been launching cross-border raids with increasing frequency over the
past few months.
"Chad's internal crisis is closely linked
to the Darfur conflict," Takirambudde said. "The international community must
warn Khartoum that it will be held responsible for any abuses against civilians
committed by its proxies."
President Idriss Déby, who took
power in a military coup launched from Darfur in 1990, is a member of the Zaghawa
ethnic group, as are many members of the Darfur rebel group, the Sudan Liberation
Army/Movement (SLA/M). A one-time ally of the Sudanese government, Déby
has faced growing domestic opposition over the past six months, including from
individuals within his own Zaghawa clan.
Within Sudan, the Sudanese government
has attacked Zaghawa in Darfur and used the government-controlled media to accuse
them of wanting a "Greater Zaghawaland," in order to incite other ethnic groups
against them.
"The instability in Chad poses the risk
of new ethnic reprisals in Chad and Darfur," said Takirambudde. "Given the links
to Darfur, ethnic Zaghawa may be particularly at risk."
Relations between Chad and Sudan deteriorated
sharply in late 2005. Darfur rebels had long used eastern Chad as a logistical
supply base and received support from Chadian officials. In December Chadian
rebels hosted by the Sudanese government in Darfur attacked military bases in
eastern Chad.
In February, Sudan and Chad agreed to
normalize relations and allow 100 military monitors from the African Union to
patrol their common border. The A.U. monitors have just begun their deployment.
Human Rights Watch documented in February
the spread of attacks on civilians from Darfur into Chad in "Darfur Bleeds:
Recent Cross-Border Violence in Chad." It has published reports since 2004 detailing
crimes against humanity, "ethnic cleansing," and war crimes committed by Sudanese
government forces against civilians in Darfur.
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