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Author Topic: Chad army helicopter fires rockets into Sudan border area: military  (Read 6404 times)

Offline tigershark

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Chad army helicopter fires rockets into Sudan border area: military
23 hours ago

PARIS (AFP) — A Chad army helicopter fired rockets Friday in an area close to Sudan's Darfur border racked by tension over rebel activity and refugee flows, a French military source told AFP.

"Three Chad army helicopters took off at 0530 (GMT) and 0545 from Abeche, one of which fired rockets before returning to its base," the French source stated.

The three helicopters, a Mi-171 transport and two Mi-35 gunships, were each equipped with rocket-launchers, having been moved from the capital Ndjamena to the border region.

The source said French soldiers numbering 1,250 and based in Chad under a longstanding shared defence agreement between Ndjamena and Paris had no knowledge of Chadian rebel movements in the area.

Similar numbers of French troops are also in the region under the leadership of a European Union peacekeeping mission, and their high command in Brussels also spoke Friday morning of an incident involving rebels, although without specifying if they were Sudanese in origin or backed by Khartoum.

EU military officials had said that the head of the EUFOR mission in the region, Irish Lieutenant General Patrick Nash, had relayed concern at the meeting.

"He said that something happened this morning involving rebels in eastern Chad. He didn't specify if they came from Sudan or not. They are still investigating what happened," one officer said, on condition of anonymity.

"There are no details at the moment," he said.

A second officer confirmed Nash's comments.

A rebel spokesman, Abderaman Koulamallah, denied any attack by Chadian government forces.

"A Chadian helicopter overflew our positions along the border at high altitude, but sheered off as soon as we disclosed our anti-aircraft guns," he told AFP by telephone.

He claimed EUFOR was trying to boost morale among government troops, adding, "We are preparing for a battle and they are panicking."

The head of the African Union, Jean Ping, held talks with the presidents of Chad and Sudan on Thursday in a bid to resolve a growing stand-off.

Ping met Chad's President Idriss Deby in Ndjamena, moving on to Khartoum in the evening to hold discussions with Sudanese President Omar al-Beshir.

On Saturday, rebels from war-torn Darfur staged an unprecedented attack on Khartoum's twin city of Omdurman -- the first time that the capital has ever been involved in decades of regional fighting.

More than 200 people were killed in that assault and other clashes outside the city in recent days.

Sudan accused Chad of backing the rebels and broke off diplomatic ties on Sunday. Chad closed its border the following day, ramping up tensions.

Relations have been strained since 2003 when war broke out in Darfur, sending hundreds of thousands of desperate refugees fleeing across the Chadian border.

EUFOR began in March its year-long United Nations mandate to protect hundreds of thousands of refugees from Darfur as well as people displaced by rebel insurgency in Chad and the northern Central African Republic.

A source within the EU military mission spelled out Friday that EUFOR's rules of engagement mean it is unable to intervene unless the civilian population comes under attack.

A rebel offensive on Ndjamena in mid-February held up deployment of EUFOR, which will eventually number 3,700 troops.

Ndjamena was able to repel that invasion thanks to its helicopter fleet and the assistance of French troops, who secured airports allowing assault aircraft to maneouvre.

A European military source said that Chad has moved heavy reinforcements into eastern border regions following "infiltrations," in anticipation of a new rebel assault ahead of the rainy season.

Koulamallah said that current rebel movements did not necessarily mean a new attack on Ndjamena but "the final objective is to oust Idriss Deby."

Source
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5g9V8ffb9uY1PsJ9UHWXGLV6nMxog

 



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