PARIS (Reuters) - Chad's President Idriss Deby urged the
European Union on Thursday to send a peacekeeping force to his
country as quickly as possible.
The 27-nation EU suspended deployment of a 3,700-strong
EUFOR mission to eastern Chad, meant to protect civilians from
a spillover of violence from Darfur, when a column of rebels
stormed the capital on Saturday and tried to overthrow Deby.
"It would have helped us if EUFOR was already in place,"
Deby told France's Europe 1 radio.
"We want to launch a solemn appeal to the European Union,
and France...to make sure that this force is put in place as
quickly as possible to lighten the load we are carrying."
He said looking after some 300,000 refugees and 170,000
displaced Chadians was a burden on Chad's forces.
Deby said he had never lost control of his country after
the rebel offensive in fighting which killed at least 100
civilians at the weekend.
He again accused neighboring Sudan of backing the rebel
offensive and said he feared Sudan would help the rebels launch
another attack. "It is not impossible because the international
community is saying nothing against Sudan," he said.
"Sudan has had a sort of green light to destabilize Chad,
not just Chad but the whole region."
Sudan denies destabilizing Chad and accuses Chad of
supporting a five-year uprising in its remote Darfur region.
The European Commission said on Tuesday it was concerned
violence in Chad's capital could disrupt aid deliveries in the
east of the country.
It said deployment of the EU force, originally planned for
last Friday, was vital to keeping aid flowing.
Deby said France had provided the Chadian army with
training but had not directly intervened in the fighting. He
said he was ready to pardon six French aid workers jailed for
eight years for abducting children if France requested it.
The incident, involving the aid group "Zoe's Ark" which
said it had gone to Chad to help children orphaned in the
conflict-torn Darfur region, aroused strong feelings last year
but Deby said the situation had settled down.
"I am ready to pardon them," he said, but only "if the
government asks."
(Editing by Philippa Fletcher)