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Chad: A Divided Nation Uniting Against Qaddafi?
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11759 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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4 / 1987 |
2,085 Words |
| Author
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Michael Radu and Adam Garfinkle Michael Radu and Adam Garfinkle are research associates at the
Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia. |
Chad is an unlikely country to have garnered as many headlines as it has in recent years; it is certainly not a place that one would expect to find millions of dollars worth of Soviet military equipment lying abandoned or destroyed in the desert sun. Chad has one of the smallest populations in Africa - about 5 million people. It is also one of the poorest countries in the world, with an average per capita gross national product of about $120, and its economy has been declining at a rate of about 5 percent each year since 1970. Chad's small and impoverished population occupies a huge, desolate, resourceless, and landlocked area of 495,000 square miles - about the size of France, Spain, and England combined.
But Chad has porous borders with Niger, Libya, Sudan, the Central African Republic, Cameroon, and Nigeria. The border with Libya has proven to be the greatest source of Chad's recent newsworthiness. To understand the Chadian caldron of intrigue, however, Chad's political history, the French legacy and continuing Western stakes in the area, and the interests of Chad's neighbors bear notice.
Since gaining independence from France in 1960, Chad's sovereign legal status has rested awkwardly aside its actual political disintegration. When Chad became a state, it was not a nation in even the remotest sense. The Sahelian region has been for centuries an arena of conflict between northern Arabs and non-Arabs from the east and south. Over the ages before the French arrived, amid sifting power centers and political loyalties, warrior and slave-raiding traditions arose along the caravan routes between Arab centers and black Africa. Such traditions exacerbate the racial and the religious cleavages in what is today Chad, with non-black
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