Chad country profile
- Published
A largely semi-desert country, Chad is rich in gold and uranium and stands to benefit from its recently-acquired status as an oil-exporting state.
Chad's post-independence history has been marked by instability and violence, stemming mostly from tension between the mainly Arab-Muslim north and the predominantly Christian and animist south.
Chad became an oil-producing nation in 2003, with the completion of a $4bn pipeline linking its oilfields to terminals on the Atlantic coast.
However, it suffers from inadequate infrastructure, and internal conflict with rebels in the north, exacerbated by a jihadist insurgency across the Sahel region and Lake Chad Basin.
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REPUBLIC OF CHAD: FACTS
Capital: N'Djamena
Area: 1,284,000 sq km
Population: 17.9 million
Languages: French, Arabic
Life expectancy: 51 years (men) 54 years (women)
LEADER
President: General Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno
Chad's military ruler Mahamat Déby was declared the official winner of the May 2024 presidential elections, legitimising his grip on power.
Gen Déby won 61% of the vote, while his closest rival, Prime Minister Succes Masra, won 18.5%.
Mr Masra had earlier declared he had won a "resounding victory" in the first round of voting, and that victory had been stolen "from the people".
Gen Déby was installed as Chad's leader by the military after his father, Idriss Déby Itno, was killed during a battle with rebel forces in April 2021.
His victory means the Déby family's rule of over three decades continues.
Chad is the first of the countries where the military seized power in West and Central Africa in recent years to hold elections and restore civilian rule. But critics say with the election of Gen Déby, little has changed.
MEDIA
Although legally there is freedom of the press, in practice this is restricted. Criticism of the government is generally permitted but reporters commonly self-censor to avoid reprisals.
Media outlets can have their own editorial line, but investigative reporting that is critical of senior government officials and their close associates is not tolerated, says Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
TIMELINE
Some key dates in Chad's history:
1883-93 - Sudanese adventurer Rabih al-Zubayr conquers the kingdoms of Ouadai, Baguirmi and Kanem-Bornu, situated in what is now Chad.
1900 - France defeats al-Zubayr's army, completing its conquest in 1913. Chad becomes a colony.
1946 - Chad becomes a French overseas territory with its own territorial parliament and representation in the French National Assembly.
1960 - Chad becomes independent.
1963 - The banning of political parties triggers violent opposition in the Muslim north.
1966 - Northern revolt develops into a fully-fledged guerrilla war.
1973 - French troops help put down the northern revolt, but Frolinat continues guerrilla operations throughout the 1970s and 1980s with the help of weapons supplied by Libya.
1977 - Libya annexes the Aouzou strip, and sends in troops in 1980 to support President Goukouni Oueddei in his fight against the Army of the North, led by a former prime minister, Hissene Habré.
1981 - Libyan troops withdraw at Oueddei's request.
1982 - Habré seizes power. He is later accused of mass political killings during his rule.
1983 - The Organisation of African Unity recognises Habré's government, but Oueddei's forces continue resistance in the north with Libyan help.
1987 - The combined troops of Frolinat and the Chadian government, with French and US assistance, force Libya out of the entire northern region apart from the Aouzou strip and parts of Tibesti.
1990 - Coup leader Hissene Habre toppled by former ally Idriss Déby.
1994 - International Court of Justice rejects Libyan claims on Aouzou and rules that Chad had sovereignty over the strip.
1996 - Déby wins Chad's first multi-party presidential election.
1998 - The Movement for Democracy and Justice in Chad, led by Déby's former Defence Minister, Youssouf Togoimi, begins armed rebellion against the government.
2006 - Rebels seeking to oust President Déby battle government forces outside the capital. Hundreds are killed. Chad cuts diplomatic ties with Sudan, accusing it of backing the rebels.
State of emergency imposed in eastern areas bordering Sudan's Darfur region after a spate of ethnic violence.
2007 - UN Security Council authorises a UN-EU peacekeeping force to protect civilians from violence spilling over from Darfur in neighbouring Sudan.
2009 - Eight rebel groups unite to form new rebel alliance, the Union of Resistance Forces (UFR). EU peacekeepers in eastern Chad hand over to a new, larger UN force known as Minurcat.
2010 - President Déby and Sudan's Omar al-Bashir hold talks in Khartoum, their first meeting for six years; President al-Bashir says Sudan is ready for full normalisation of ties.
Chad and Sudan agree to deploy joint force to monitor situation along their shared border. Chad-Sudan border reopens seven years after Darfur conflict forced its closure.
2012 - Chad calls on countries neighbouring northern Nigeria to set up a joint military force to tackle Boko Haram militants.
Senegal, African Union agree to set up special tribunal to try Chad's former leader Hissene Habré.
Leader of rebel group FPR, Abdel Kader Baba Ladde, surrenders.
2016 - Hissene Habré is found guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced to life in prison by an African Union-backed court in Senegal.
2021 - President Déby dies during military operation against rebel group.
2023 - Chad plans for a referendum on a new constitution aimed at returning it to civilian rule.
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