Thousands rallied Saturday in Chad's capital in support of the president
following a defeated rebel attack, while the oil minister threatened to shut
down the country's oil pipeline unless the government is compensated for frozen
oil revenues.
 Chad President Idriss
Deby addresses a rally in N'Djamena April 15, 2006. Deby's supporters
paraded victoriously through the streets of the capital N'Djamena on
Saturday but many nervous residents feared rebels fighting to topple him
may return. [Reuters] |
President Idriss Deby's government appears desperate to attract international
attention to solve Chad's political, economic and security problems.
Deby announced Friday that he was severing relations with neighboring Sudan
and threatened to expel 200,000 Sudanese refugees if the international community
did not do more to stop what he claimed were Sudanese backed-rebels from
destabilizing his government before the May 3 presidential election.
Oil Minister Mahmat Hassan Nasser told the Associated Press in an interview
Saturday that the pipeline would be shut down unless the international community
ensured Chad received its oil royalties by midday on Tuesday.
Chad's oil exports _ 160,000 barrels per day _ are small by international
standards and have a high sulfur content, reducing their value. But Deby appears
to be gambling that any threat to the world oil supply, no matter how small,
will bring attention to his plight and free up funds he needs to finance his
government.
In January, the World Bank froze an escrow account with US$125 million
(euro103.36 million) in oil royalties in London, Nasser said. It also cut US$124
million (euro102.5 million) in financial assistance after Chad changed an oil
revenue law passed in 1999 as a condition for the World Bank's support for the
pipeline.
Nasser said the World Bank must either release the funds or the operators of
the pipeline must compensate the Chadian government.
The law required two-thirds of oil revenues to go toward improving living
standards in one of the world's poorest countries. It also required 10 percent
of proceeds to go into a savings fund to be used when Chad's oil reserves are
exhausted.
But the National Assembly amended the law in December. It doubled the money
going to the government's general budget, freed funds in the savings funds and
added security _ buying arms and equipment for the military and other security
forces _ to the programs that received over two-thirds of the royalties.
Nasser said Chadian officials met twice with World Bank representatives to
unfreeze the funds, but without success. He said that without payment, the
government would have to shut down the pipeline, which flows through Cameroon to
the Atlantic Ocean.
"The government has the right to act as it sees fit if obligations are not
met," Nasser said. He said such a move would not harm his government, but would
hurt other businesses and Cameroon, which have been collecting their revenues
from the oil.
World Bank officials were not immediately available for comment.
An Exxon Mobil-led consortium exported 133 million barrels of oil from Chad
between October 2003 and December 2005, according to World Bank statistics.
Chad, which receives a 12.5 percent royalty on each barrel exported, earned
US$307 million (about euro250 million), the bank said.
The consortium invested US$4.2 billion (euro3.47 billion) in the pipeline.
Nasser said the pipeline would continue to operate if the consortium pays the
royalties frozen in London and pays future revenues directly to Chad's treasury.
Thursday's rebel attack on the capital has shaken Deby's government and, with
the rebel United Front for Change regrouping in the countryside, the threat of a
violent overthrow of the government has not diminished.
Rebel commander Col. Regis Bechir told Radio France International that Deby's
regime was a menace.
"Dialogue is the only way to save the people of Chad," he said. "A national
reconciliation, with a democratic basis, would be best. And we are determined to
continue the armed struggle against the phony elections."
Deby held a rally in central N'djamena Saturday where thousands of people
packed into the Place d'Independence, waving Chadian flags and shouting slogans.
The president arrived in a civilian Humvee surrounded by hundreds of
well-equipped soldiers and thanked them for "crushing the rebels."
"We will do anything to preserve democracy in Chad, we will do anything to
preserve security in Chad," Deby said.
The Darfur crisis, which Sudan accuses Deby of fomenting, and internal
dissension over how to spend oil revenues have weakened the president, who has
led Chad since seizing power in a coup in 1990. There has been enormous dissent
over his decision to run for a third term after two irregular elections and over
how oil royalties have disappeared.
Deby repeatedly has accused Sudan of hiring mercenaries to overthrow his
government. Sudan has denied this and has long accused Chad of supporting
fighters in its volatile Darfur region, where Arab militias and African rebels
have fought for nearly three years. Some 180,000 people have died in Darfur.
The Sudanese government has denied any involvement with the Chadian rebels
and Deby has taken a lead role in African Union efforts to negotiate a peace
deal for Darfur.
Chad, an arid, landlocked country about three times the size of France, has
been wracked by violence for most of its history, including more than 30 years
of civil war since gaining independence from France in 1960 and various
small-scale insurgencies since 1998.