Sudan and Chad agreed Tuesday to end their proxy wars and engage in direct talks and joint development projects to rebuild their war-affected border areas. President Idriss Déby of Chad made a surprise visit to Khartoum for talks with President Omar Hassan al-Bashir of Sudan on Monday after ties between the oil-producing countries had hit bottom, with each supporting rebels fighting the other’s government.
Source: New York Times
Showing posts with label Idriss Déby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Idriss Déby. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Friday, November 28, 2008
Breakthrough in Chad president's son murder
Paris police have detained four people in connection with the murder in 2007 of Brahim Deby, the 27 year-old son of Chadian President Idriss Deby Itno, sources close to the enquiry said on Friday. A fifth suspect has been arrested in Romania, the source said.
Deby was found dead in the underground car park of his apartment building in the western Paris suburb of Courbevoie in July 2007, apparently having choked to death with powder from a fire extinguisher. Closed circuit television footage at the scene showed that he was attacked by several masked men, investigators said. French police have ruled out a political motive for the murder, saying it was more likely a criminal underworld affair. The president's son was convicted a year before his death of possession of drugs and weapons after he was detained outside a Paris nightclub carrying a handgun.
Following the arrest, the Chadian president signed a decree stripping his son of his post as a technical adviser. He was then widely seen as having fallen out of favour with his father.
Source: IoL
Deby was found dead in the underground car park of his apartment building in the western Paris suburb of Courbevoie in July 2007, apparently having choked to death with powder from a fire extinguisher. Closed circuit television footage at the scene showed that he was attacked by several masked men, investigators said. French police have ruled out a political motive for the murder, saying it was more likely a criminal underworld affair. The president's son was convicted a year before his death of possession of drugs and weapons after he was detained outside a Paris nightclub carrying a handgun.
Following the arrest, the Chadian president signed a decree stripping his son of his post as a technical adviser. He was then widely seen as having fallen out of favour with his father.
Source: IoL
Monday, July 2, 2007
Chad leader's son killed in Paris
The son of Chad's President Idriss Deby has been found dead in Paris after apparently being forced to inhale the chemicals from a fire extinguisher. The body of Brahim Deby, 27, was found in the car park of his block of flats. An extinguisher was found by his body. An autopsy report said he had likely been asphyxiated by "white powder". Police have launched a murder inquiry.
Brahim Deby was last year sacked as a presidential advisor after a conviction for drugs and weapons possession. His body was found in a corridor between the parking lot and the stairs leading to the flats in Courbevoie, west of Paris. An initial autopsy report concluded he had been "asphyxiated, probably by the white powder he was sprayed with", a spokeswoman for the prosecutor's office in the western suburb of Nanterre said. The source of the powder is believed to have been the fire extinguisher found near the body. A head wound found on Deby's body had not caused his death, the prosecutor's office said. "He clearly died a violent death," the spokeswoman said. "We are going on the hypothesis of murder."
President Idriss Deby came to power in a coup in 1991. Rebels trying to oust him last year attacked the capital, N'Djamena, before being repulsed with French military aid. A few months later, Mr Deby won elections boycotted by the opposition, who complained of fraud.
A spokesman for the rebel group, the Union of Forces for Democracy and Development (UFDD) spokesman Makaila Nguebla told Reuters news agency that Brahim Deby's conduct had prompted many top Chadian officials to join the rebellion. "He is at the root of all the frustration. He used to slap government ministers, senior Chadian officials were humiliated by Deby's son."
Source: BBC
Brahim Deby was last year sacked as a presidential advisor after a conviction for drugs and weapons possession. His body was found in a corridor between the parking lot and the stairs leading to the flats in Courbevoie, west of Paris. An initial autopsy report concluded he had been "asphyxiated, probably by the white powder he was sprayed with", a spokeswoman for the prosecutor's office in the western suburb of Nanterre said. The source of the powder is believed to have been the fire extinguisher found near the body. A head wound found on Deby's body had not caused his death, the prosecutor's office said. "He clearly died a violent death," the spokeswoman said. "We are going on the hypothesis of murder."
President Idriss Deby came to power in a coup in 1991. Rebels trying to oust him last year attacked the capital, N'Djamena, before being repulsed with French military aid. A few months later, Mr Deby won elections boycotted by the opposition, who complained of fraud.
A spokesman for the rebel group, the Union of Forces for Democracy and Development (UFDD) spokesman Makaila Nguebla told Reuters news agency that Brahim Deby's conduct had prompted many top Chadian officials to join the rebellion. "He is at the root of all the frustration. He used to slap government ministers, senior Chadian officials were humiliated by Deby's son."
Source: BBC
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Wednesday, August 9, 2006
Deby sworn in as Chad's president
Idriss Deby was sworn in Tuesday as Chad's president to serve his new term, according to reports from N'Djamena. Beating the other four contenders, Deby won the presidential election in May by gaining 64.67 percent of the votes.
Among the leaders attending the swearing-in ceremony were Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Source: Peoples Daily
Among the leaders attending the swearing-in ceremony were Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Source: Peoples Daily
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