N'DJAMENA - Chad went to the polls Monday in the first round of its presidential election with incumbent Idriss Deby Itno virtually assured of extending his 21-year rule after his main rivals boycotted the vote.
Deby, in power since ousting dictator Hissene Habre in a 1990 coup, is seeking a fourth term as president of one of the world's poorest countries, albeit with growing oil exports and abundant resources of uranium and gold. Key opposition leaders have withdrawn from the vote after claiming that Deby's Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS) party stole February parliamentary elections and the start of Monday's vote was marred by hitches. Witnesses said many voting stations opened late in the capital because of the late arrival of voting materials and staff. The ballot was underway in the district of Djambalpar where residents said they were pleased to be coming out to vote. "I'm very happy to come to vote today to fulfil my civic duty," 58-year-old civil servant Youssouf Zeni Said. Abdelaziz Djikouana, a 19-year-old student, said: "I'm pleased to vote today, it's my duty. "I expect a good result for the president so he is re-elected." Opposition leaders Saleh Kebzabo, Wadal Abdelkader Kamougue and Ngarlejy Yorongar have demanded reforms including the issuing of new voters' cards. They claim that unfair conditions caused the MPS to crush them in the February parliamentary poll and are predicting the new poll will be an "historic fraud". Deby has said he is certain of re-election and that the poll would be "credible". The real reason for his former challengers' boycott was that "they realise they will be beaten", the president told a press conference on Friday. His two remaining challengers, Albert Pahimi Padacke and Nadji Madou, are from smaller opposition parties. In the February polls, the first contested by the opposition since 2002, MPS won an absolute majority with 113 of the 188 seats in parliament against a fragmented and underfunded opposition of more than 100 parties. Deby became Chad's first president to be elected by universal suffrage in 1996. He was elected to a third mandate in 2006, following a modification of the constitution, at elections boycotted by the opposition. Since then, he has gained a reputation as one of African politics great survivors. Deby's regime has been faced with rebellions since late 2005, particularly in the east of the country, which borders Sudany's war-torn Darfur region. In 2008 rebels came close to overthrowing Deby, briefly entering the capital before being pushed back with the help of French forces. About 4.8 million of Chad's 11.1 million citizens are eligible to vote, plus around 233,000 expatriates. AFP