The Chadian government has responded to the bloody anti-government protests that broke out in the country on Thursday which claimed the lives of over 70 protesters by suspending seven political parties and placing them on a government watch.
The announcement of the clampdown on the opposition which was made on Friday by a government spokesman said the suspension was for the next three months.
A frontline opposition leader, Succes Masra, the leader of Les Transformateurs Party, posted on Twitter that the national headquarters of his party was ransacked by security forces who forced their way in for an “illegal search.”
“After having 70 people shot, and arrested, wounded, tortured more than 1,000 others, they are now attacking buildings and documents,” Masra, whose party was listed as number one on the suspended list, tweeted.
The peaceful protests which turned bloody when security forces were called in to disperse the demonstrators, broke out in N’Djamena, and several other cities as the protesters took to the streets to protest against interim leader, Mahamat Idriss Deby, extending his tenure by two more years.
Mahamat Deby who became Head of a Transitional government after his father, former President Idriss Deby Itno, was killed by terrorists in April 2021, after clinging on to power for over 30 years in power.
He has initially agreed to an 18-month transition which would have ended last Thursday but a week before the expiration of the transition period, the government, however, announced that Deby would stay in power for another two years, prompting the protests.
The peaceful protest was truncated when security forces fired teargas and live bullets on the demonstrators, mostly in N’Djamena, killing 30 people.
In the country’s second-largest city, Moundou, a morgue official confirmed that he counted 32 dead bodies that were brought in following the confrontation with the security forces.
Prime Minister Saleh Kebzabo later defended the government’s use of force against the protesters, telling reporters the demonstration was “an attempted coup.”