Chadian rebels clash with gov’t forces in capital; head toward presidential palace–Associated Press, February 2, 2008
Hundreds of rebels penetrated the capital of Chad today, clashing with government troops and moving on the presidential palace after a three-day advance through the oil-producing central African nation, officials and witnesses said.
Chad’s ambassador to Ethiopia said the capital had not fallen and that President Idriss Deby was "fine" in his palace.
"The situation is under control," ambassador Cherif Mahamat Zene told The Associated Press. "The head of state is fine in his palace … It’s true that there are some rebels who have entered the city, but to say the city has fallen is false."
A French military spokesman, Col. Thierry Burkhard, said that Chadian government forces were pushing rebels away from the presidential palace but that the outcome of the fighting today remained unclear. To read the rest of the story, click the link above.
As if Eritrea and Ethiopia resuming border battles and bickering is not enough for Africa, now Sudan is charging that Chad is attacking across their mutual border. The conflict between Sudan and Chad is a direct result of the Darfur War in western Sudan and the ongoing civil wars in Chad and the Central African Republic.
See:
Sudan
accuses Chad of troop incursion,
bombardment–AFP, Dec. 28, 2007
Sudan
accuses Chadian army of violating its
territory–Sudan Tribune, Dec. 28, 2007