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Idriss Deby

Idriss Déby
إدريس ديبي
Idriss Déby at the White House in 2014.jpg
8th President of Chad
Assumed office
2 December 1990
Prime Minister Jean Alingué Bawoyeu
Joseph Yodoyman
Fidèle Moungar
Delwa Kassiré Koumakoye
Koibla Djimasta
Nassour Guelendouksia Ouaido
Nagoum Yamassoum
Haroun Kabadi
Moussa Faki
Pascal Yoadimnadji
Adoum Younousmi
Delwa Kassiré Koumakoye
Youssouf Saleh Abbas
Emmanuel Nadingar
Djimrangar Dadnadji
Kalzeubet Pahimi Deubet
Albert Pahimi Padacké
Preceded by Hissène Habré
Chairperson of the African Union
In office
30 January 2016 – 30 January 2017
Preceded by Robert Mugabe
Succeeded by Alpha Conde
Personal details
Born (1952-06-18) June 18, 1952 (age 64)
Fada, French Equatorial Africa (now Chad)
Political party Patriotic Salvation Movement
Spouse(s) Hinda Déby (2005–present)
Amani Musa Hilal
Children Mahamat
Brahim
Religion Islam

General Idriss Déby Itno (Arabic: إدريس ديبي‎‎ Idrīs Daybī Itnū; born June 18, 1952) is a Chadian politician who has been the President of Chad since 1990. He is also head of the Patriotic Salvation Movement. Déby is of the Bidyat clan of the Zaghawa ethnic group. He took power at the head of a rebellion against President Hissène Habré in December 1990 and has since survived various rebellions against his own rule. He won elections in 1996 and 2001, and after term limits were eliminated he won again in 2006, 2011, and 2016. He added "Itno" to his surname in January 2006. He is a graduate of Muammar Gaddafi's World Revolutionary Center.

Déby was born in Fada as the son of a Zaghawa herder. After finishing school he entered the Officers' School in N'Djamena. From there he was sent to France for training, returning to Chad in 1976 with a professional pilot certificate. He remained loyal to the army and to President Félix Malloum until central authority crumbled in 1979. Déby tied his fortunes to those of Hissène Habré, one of the chief Chadian warlords. A year after Habré became President in 1982, Déby was made commander-in-chief of the army. He distinguished himself in 1984 by destroying pro-Libyan forces in Eastern Chad. In 1985 Habré sent him to Paris to follow a course at the École de Guerre; on his return he was made chief military advisor to the Presidency. In 1987 he confronted Libyan forces on the field in the so-called "Toyota War", adopting tactics that inflicted heavy losses on enemy forces. A rift emerged in 1989 between Habré and Déby over the increasing power of the Presidential Guard. According to Human Rights Watch, Habré was found responsible for "widespread political killings, systematic torture, and thousands of arbitrary arrests", as well as ethnic purgings when it was perceived that group leaders could pose a threat to his rule. Increasingly paranoid, Habré accused Déby, Mahamat Itno, minister of the interior, and Hassan Djamous, commander in chief of the Chadian army of preparing a coup d'état. Déby fled to Libya, while Itno and Djamous were arrested and killed. Since all three were ethnic Zaghawa, Habré started a targeted campaign against the group which saw hundreds seized, tortured and imprisoned. Dozens died in detention or were summarily executed. In 2016, Habré was convicted of war crimes by a specially-created international tribunal in Senegal.


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