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Chadian presidential election, 2006

Chadian presidential election, 2006
Chad
← 2001 3 May 2006 (2006-05-03) 2011 →
 
Candidate Idriss Déby Delwa Kassiré Koumakoye Albert Pahimi Padacké
Party MPS Viva-RNDP RNDT–Le Réveil
Popular vote 1,863,042 435,997 225,368
Percentage 64.67% 15.13% 7.82%

President before election

Idriss Déby
MPS

Elected President

Idriss Déby
MPS


Idriss Déby
MPS

Idriss Déby
MPS

Presidential elections were held in Chad on 3 May 2006. A referendum in 2005 had led to changes to the constitution that made it possible for President Idriss Déby to run for a third term; having come to power in December 1990, he previously won elections in 1996 and 2001. Despite a serious rebellion based in the east of the country, the elections were held on schedule; Déby was re-elected with about 65% of the vote, according to official results. The main opposition parties boycotted the election.

At the time of the elections the country faced increasing tensions with Sudan, high unemployment, and a growing insurgency fueled by deserting members of the Chadian military and the United Front for Democratic Change rebel group. An attempted coup was made on 14 March 2006, but was put down by members of the army loyal to Déby. Chadian journalist Koumbo Singa Gali Sy claimed the election would "be a non-event. It's Déby against Déby." There were nearly 12,000 polling stations.

The elections were the first in the history of Chad in which no major opposition candidate participated, with most political parties in Chad boycotting the elections in response to Déby's decision to run for a third term. The only candidates were Déby, Agriculture Minister Albert Pahimi Padacké for the National Rally for Democracy in Chad, former Prime Minister Delwa Kassiré Koumakoye for the National Rally for Development and Progress, Mahamat Abdoulaye for the People's Movement for Democracy in Chad, and Brahim Koulamallah for the Renewed African Socialist Movement party; the latter three were representatives of political parties allied with Déby's Patriotic Salvation Movement party.


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