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PROFILE
Geography
Area: 1,284,634 sq. km. (496,000 sq. mi.); about twice the size of Texas.
Cities: Capital--N'Djamena (pop. 1 million est.). Other major cities--Moundou,
Abeche, Sarh, Bongor, Faya.
Terrain: Desert, mountainous north; large arid central plain; fertile lowlands
in southern regions.
Climate: Northern desert--very dry throughout the year; central plain--hot and
dry, with intense rainy season mid-June to mid-September; southern
lowlands--warm and more humid with intense rainy seasons from late May to
early October.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Chadian(s).
Population (2009 census): 11,175,915.
Annual population growth rate (2009 census): 3.5%.
Density: 8.7 per sq. km. (3.36 per sq. mi.).
Ethnic groups: 200 distinct groups. In the north and center, Gorane
(sub-groups are Toubou, Daza, Kreda), Zaghawa, Kanembou, Ouaddai, Arabs,
Baguirmi, Hadjerai, Fulbe, Kotoko, Hausa, Boulala, and Maba, most of whom are
Muslim. In the south, Sara (including major subgroups--Ngambaye, Mbaye,
Goulaye), Moudang, Moussei, and Massa, most of whom are Christian or animist.
About 1,000 French citizens live in Chad.
Religions: Muslim 55%, Christian 35%, animist 10%.
Languages: French and Arabic (official); Sara (in the south), more than 120
indigenous Chadian languages and dialects.
Education: Years compulsory--6. Attendance--primary school
82.71% (2008); secondary school 19.02% (2007); higher education n/a. Literacy
(age 15 and over can read and write French or Arabic, 2003 est.)--48%.
Health: Life expectancy (2009 est.)--48.7 years. Infant mortality
rate (2008 est.)--130 deaths/1,000 live births.
Work force (2006 est.)--3.747 million. Agriculture--more than 80%;
largely subsistence agriculture and stock raising.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: August 11, 1960 (from France).
Branches: Executive--president (head of state), prime minister, Council
of State. Legislative--National Assembly (unicameral). Judicial--Supreme
Court; Court of Appeals; criminal courts; magistrate courts.
Major political parties: The Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS) is dominant,
with a coalition of 103 of the 120 parties. The other 17 are aligned in the
opposition coalition called the Coalition for the Defense of the Constitution
(CPDC).
Suffrage: Universal over 18.
Administrative subdivisions: 22 regions.
Economy
GDP, current prices (2010): $7.9 billion.
GDP per capita income (2008): $780.
Population living below poverty line (2008): 43.4%.
Natural resources: Petroleum, natron (sodium carbonate), kaolin, gold,
bauxite, tin, tungsten, titanium, iron ore.
Agriculture (2008, 13.6% of GDP): Products--sugar, cotton, gum arabic,
livestock, fish, peanuts, millet, sorghum, rice, sweet potatoes, cassava,
dates, manioc. Arable land (2007)--38%.
Industry (2008, 48.8% of GDP): Types--meatpacking, beer brewing, soap,
cigarettes, construction materials, natron mining, soft-drink bottling.
Services (2008): 37.6% of GDP.
Trade: Exports--U.S. $2.71 billion (f.o.b., 2009): oil, cotton,
livestock, gum arabic. Major markets--United States, Nigeria, France,
Cameroon, Portugal, Germany, Thailand, Costa Rica, South Africa. Imports--U.S.
$2.54 billion (f.o.b., 2009): petroleum products, machinery and transportation
equipment, foodstuffs, industrial goods, textiles. Major suppliers
(2004)--U.S., France, Cameroon, Nigeria.
Central government budget (2010): Revenues--U.S. $2.06 billion. Expenditures--U.S.
$2.4 billion.
Defense (2002): $31 million.
National holiday: Independence Day, August 11.
Fiscal year: Calendar year.
U.S. aid received to date (FY 2008 and 2009): Total USAID and State
humanitarian assistance to Chad--$777,425,663.
GEOGRAPHY
Chad is a landlocked country in north central Africa, with a territory twice
the size of Texas. Population densities range from 54 persons per square
kilometer in southern zones to 0.1 persons in the vast northern desert region,
itself larger than France. The population of the capital city of N'Djamena,
situated at the confluence of the Chari and Logone Rivers, is representative
of Chad’s ethnic and cultural diversity, with a current population of over
one million people.
Chad has four bioclimatic zones. The northernmost Saharan Desert zone averages
less than 200 mm (8") of rainfall annually. The central Sahelian zone
receives between 200 and 600 mm (24") of rainfall and has vegetation
ranging from grass/shrub steppe to thorny, open savanna. The southern zone,
often referred to as the Sudanian zone, receives between 600 and 1,000 mm
(39"), with woodland savanna and deciduous forests for vegetation.
Rainfall in the small Guinea zone, limited to Chad's southwestern tip, ranges
between 1,000 and 1,200 mm (47").
The country's topography is generally flat, with the elevation gradually
rising as one moves north and east away from Lake Chad. The highest point in
Chad is Emi Koussi, a mountain that rises 3,100 meters (10,200 ft.) in the
northern Tibesti Mountains. The Ennedi Plateau and the Ouaddai highlands in
the east complete the image of a gradually sloping basin, which descends
toward Lake Chad. There also are central highlands in the Guera region rising
to 1,500 meters (4,900 ft.).
Lake Chad is the second-largest lake in West Africa and is one of the most
important wetlands on the continent. Home to hundreds of species of fish and
birds, the lake has shrunk dramatically in the last 4 decades due to increased
water use and inadequate rainfall. Bordered by Chad, Niger, Nigeria, and
Cameroon, Lake Chad currently covers 1,350 square kilometers, down from 25,000
square kilometers in 1963. The Chari and Logone Rivers, both of which
originate in the Central African Republic and flow northward, provide most of
the water entering Lake Chad.
PEOPLE
There are more than 200 ethnic groups in Chad. Those in the north and center
are generally Muslim; most southerners are Christians or animists. About 80%
of the Chadian population is rural. There are over 250,000 refugees near the
eastern border from the Sudanese conflict in Darfur; more than 50,000 Central
African Republic refugees in the south; and approximately 200,000 internally
displaced persons in eastern Chad.
HISTORY
The region has been known to traders and geographers since the late Middle
Ages. Since then, Chad has served as a crossroads for the Muslim peoples of
the desert and sahelian regions, and the animist African tribes of the savanna
regions to the south. While the former developed coherent political entities
that became the powerful kingdoms of Kanem-Bornu, Baguirmi, and Ouaddai,
controlling much of northern and central Chad as well as parts of Nigeria and
Sudan, the southern regions were much less politically developed and remained
splintered into small, local, tribal chiefdoms. Contact between the two
regions was dominated by regular raids conducted by Muslims into the
non-Muslim south to secure slaves for their own use and for trade into North
Africa and the Middle East.
The French first entered Chad in 1891, establishing their authority through
military expeditions that reduced the politically backward south and by
defeating the armies of the northern and central Muslim kingdoms, culminating
in decisive victory over the powerful kingdom of Baguirmi in the battle of
Kousseri (today in Cameroon). The French did not consider the territory
pacified until 1911; armed clashes between French forces and local resistance
fighters continued for years thereafter.
France ruled southern Chad ("le Tchad Utile," or Useful Chad) as a
typical colony with civil administration, basic education, urbanization of
major centers, and missionary activity, while exploiting the region’s
agricultural potential. The French ruled northern and central Chad ("le
Tchad des Sultans," or Chad of the Sultans) differently, confining the
colonial footprint to a few military garrisons and relying on traditional
tribal and religious leaders to administer the local populations in time-tried
ways. The French made Chad, along with what are today Gabon, the Central
African Republic, and the Republic of the Congo, part of a colonial federation
called French Equatorial Africa, under a governor-general resident at
Brazzaville in what is now the Republic of the Congo.
In 1959, the territory of French Equatorial Africa was dissolved, and its four
constituent states--Gabon, the Central African Republic, the Republic of the
Congo, and Chad--became autonomous members of the French Community. In August
1960 Chad became an independent nation under its first president, Francois
Tombalbaye, a southerner.
Tombalbaye's authoritarianism and distrust of democracy led him in 1962 to ban
all political parties except his own Chadian Progressive Party (PPT) and to
attempt to concentrate all power in his own hands. His treatment of opponents,
real or imagined, was extremely harsh, filling the prisons with thousands of
political prisoners. His discrimination against the mostly Muslim central and
northern regions and his attempt to impose his own ethnic group’s customs on
other tribes in Chad resulted in a tax revolt in 1965 that precipitated civil
war with northern and central militants taking up arms to oust Tombalbaye and
end the South’s political dominance.
Despite the help of French combat forces, the Tombalbaye government was never
able to quell the insurgency. Tombalbaye's rule became more irrational and
brutal, leading the military to carry out a coup in 1975, assassinating
Tombalbaye and installing General Felix Malloum, another southerner, as head
of state. In 1978, Malloum's government was broadened to include more
northerners. Internal dissent within the government led the northern prime
minister, Hissein Habre, to send his fighters against the national army in the
capital in 1979, reigniting the civil war.
Nigeria and the Organization of African Unity (OAU) attempted to bring the
Chadian factions together. In August 1979, the Lagos accord established a
transitional government pending national elections planned within 18 months.
Goukouni Oueddei, a northerner, was named President; Colonel Kamougue, a
southerner, Vice President; and Habre, Minister of Defense. Early in 1980,
however, the accord broke down and fighting broke out again between Goukouni's
and Habre's partisans. With assistance from Libya (which asserted a claim to
the northern Chadian territory called the Aouzou Strip), Goukouni regained
control of the capital and other urban centers and Habre retreated into Sudan.
Goukouni’s policy of political union of Chad and Libya, however, was
unpopular and generated support for Habre, whose forces took N'Djamena in June
1981. He proclaimed himself President. French troops and an OAU peacekeeping
force of 3,500 Nigerian, Senegalese, and Zairian troops remained neutral
during the conflict.
Habre continued to face armed opposition on various fronts and brutally
repressed opposition to his rule. In 1983, Goukouni’s forces launched an
offensive against the Habre government’s positions in northern and eastern
Chad with Libyan military support. This provoked French and Zairian forces to
intervene to support Habre, pushing Goukouni’s and Libyan forces northward.
In 1984, the French and Libyan Governments announced the mutual withdrawal of
their forces from Chad. The French and Zairian troops withdrew, but Libyan
forces backing Goukouni continued to occupy northern Chad.
Habre defeated southern rebel groups and began a process of national
reconciliation with former armed enemies and regime opponents. In 1986,
Habre’s forces, with French and U.S. financial and logistical support,
attacked and decisively defeated the Libyans and Goukouni’s forces in
northern Chad in what was known as the Toyota War, from Habre’s desert
warriors’ preference for using light trucks and desert-warfare tactics in
overcoming the more numerous and better-armed and -equipped enemy. With Libyan
forces expelled from nearly all of Chadian territory, a cease-fire was
declared in 1987 and Chad and Libya restored normal relations in 1989. In 1994
the International Court of Justice confirmed Chadian sovereignty over the
Aouzou Strip, effectively ending residual Libyan occupation of parts of Chad.
Habre’s increasingly authoritarian rule and perceived favoritism of his own
Gorane ethnic group weakened the coalition of northern and central groups on
which he depended for support. In 1989, Idriss Deby, one of Habre's leading
generals and a Zaghawa, defected and fled to Darfur in Sudan, from which he
mounted a Zaghawa-supported series of attacks on the Habre regime. In December
1990, with Libyan and Sudanese assistance, Deby's forces successfully marched
on N'Djamena, causing Habre to flee the country. Deby's Patriotic Salvation
Movement (MPS) approved a national charter on February 28, 1991, with Deby as
president.
During the 1990s and into the new century, Deby ruled in an authoritarian
fashion, although proclaiming a desire for a democratic transition while
surviving frequent coup and assassination attempts. He promulgated a new
constitution in 1996, legalized political parties in 1992, and held an
inclusive “National Conference” in 1993 aimed at political and electoral
reform leading to a pluralist democratic regime.
In 1996, Deby won the country's first multi-party presidential election,
defeating General Kamougue. In 1997, Deby’s MPS party won 63 of 125 seats in
legislative elections. International observers noted numerous serious
irregularities in both electoral events. In 2001, Deby won reelection in a
flawed contest, gaining 63% of the votes. In 2002, the MPS was successful in
similarly flawed legislative elections.
In 2004, the National Assembly voted to amend the constitution to abolish
presidential term limits; the amendment was approved in a 2005 national
referendum. In 2006, Deby was elected to his third 5-year presidential term
with 78% of the vote.
As a result, opposition parties boycotted the 2006 National Assembly
elections, precipitating a political crisis. The government responded by
signing an agreement with the opposition coalition for a program of political
and electoral reforms aimed at credible national legislative, municipal, and
presidential elections, codified in an August 13, 2007 accord. The accord also
extended the mandate of the 2002 Assembly until such time as the reforms were
achieved and the elections held.
Dissatisfaction with Deby’s long rule among many ethnic groups, including
subsets of Deby’s own Zaghawa ethnic group, and tensions between Chad and
Sudan caused by the Darfur crisis led in 2004 to the creation of a renewed and
serious rebel threat: several newly-formed Chadian rebel groups found refuge
in Sudan and support from the Sudanese Government, enabling them to mount
frequent armed attacks into Chad, with the intention of violently toppling the
Deby regime. Deby’s situation was complicated by the influx of 300,000
Darfuri refugees into Chad and the displacement of 200,000 Chadians in eastern
Chad. The Governments of Chad and Sudan soon became involved in a deadly proxy
war, with the Government of Chad supporting Sudanese rebels committed to
regime change in Khartoum and the Government of Sudan supporting Chadian
rebels with the same goal vis-a-vis Chad. Sudanese rebels reached the Chadian
capital twice, in 2006 and 2008, nearly overrunning the city in the latter
instance, before being repulsed by government forces.
In 2008-2009, after the Chadian Army had defeated three major rebel attacks,
and the Sudanese Army repulsed a rebel attack that reached the suburbs of
Khartoum, international pressure for the normalization of Chad-Sudan relations
intensified. Several Chad-Sudan agreements brokered by third parties had
failed from 2006 to 2008, following which N’Djamena and Khartoum moved to
resolve their differences bilaterally. This resulted in January 2010 in a
Chad-Sudan peace accord, according to which the sides agreed to end the proxy
war by breaking with rebel clients, normalize relations, and secure their
border through joint military cooperation. President Deby publicly renounced
past support for Sudanese rebels, a key Sudanese and international demand, and
committed Chad to assist international efforts to resolve the Darfur crisis
through peaceful negotiation.
The humanitarian effort to assist refugees and displaced persons in eastern
Chad led to the deployment of two international peacekeeping operations, a
European one from 2007-2008, and a UN one called MINURCAT, beginning in 2008.
In 2010, the Government of Chad declined to agree to a renewal of MINURCAT's
mandate, claiming that the project had been ineffective and proposing to
provide better security with its own resources.
The August 13, 2007 accord on political and electoral reforms continues to be
implemented. The accord is facilitated through technical and political support
from the European Union (EU), the U.S., France, Germany, the African Union
(AU), and Switzerland, and they and the UN actively support the electoral
process. In October 2010, consensus was reached on election dates for the
following year: legislative in February 2011, presidential in April 2011, and
municipal in June 2011.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The constitutional basis for the government is the 1996 constitution. A strong
executive branch headed by the president dominates the Chadian political
system. Chad is a unitary, centralized republic. The executive branch names
all 22 governors, 61 prefects, and 252 sub-prefects, who have wide powers to
administer the national territory.
The president has the power to appoint the prime minister and the Council of
State (or cabinet), as well as judges, military officers, provincial
officials, and heads of Chad's parastatal firms. In cases of grave and
immediate threat, the president, in consultation with the National Assembly
President and Council of State, may declare a state of emergency.
National Assembly deputies are elected by universal suffrage for 4-year terms.
Parliamentary elections were last held in April 2002, with President Deby's
MPS party winning a large majority. The Assembly holds regular sessions twice
a year, and can hold special sessions when called for by the prime minister.
Deputies elect a president of the National Assembly every 2 years. Assembly
deputies or members of the executive branch may introduce legislation; once
passed by the Assembly, the president must take action to either sign or
reject the law within 15 days. The National Assembly must approve the prime
minister's plan of government and may force the prime minister to resign
through a majority vote of no confidence. However, if the National Assembly
rejects the executive branch's program twice in one year, the president may
disband the Assembly and call for new legislative elections. In practice, the
president exercises considerable influence over the National Assembly through
the MPS party structure.
Despite the constitution's guarantee of judicial independence from the
executive branch, the president names most key judicial officials. The Supreme
Court is made up of a chief justice, named by the president, and 15 councilors
chosen by the president and National Assembly; appointments are for life. The
Constitutional Council, with nine judges elected to 9-year terms, has the
power to review all legislation, treaties and international agreements prior
to their adoption. The constitution recognizes customary and traditional law
in locales where it is long-established and to the extent it does not
interfere with public order or constitutional guarantees of equality for all
citizens.
Principal Government Officials
President--Idriss Deby Itno
Prime Minister--Emmanuel Nadingar
Minister of Foreign Affairs and African Integration--Moussa Faki
Minister of Defense--Abdelkadir Kamougue
Minister of Finance and Budget--Gata Ngoulou
Minister of Infrastructure and Transportation--Adoum Younousmi
Minister of Petroleum--Eugene Tabe
President of the National Assembly--Nassour Guelengdouksia Ouaidou
Mediator of the Republic--Abderamane Moussa
Ambassador to the U.S.--Mahamat Adam Bechir
The Republic of Chad maintains an embassy in the United States at 2401
Massachusetts Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel: 202-462-4009; fax
202-265-1937).
DEFENSE
Chad's armed forces, l’Armee National du Tchad (ANT), is divided into its
land forces and air forces. Its overall strength is approximately 25,000
soldiers. Much of the effective leadership is drawn from President Deby’s
Zaghawa ethnic group. The Chad Government is pursuing plans to reduce the
ANT’s personnel strength and professionalize the military.
Chad participates in the Trans-Sahel Counterterrorism Partnership, of which
one element is a U.S. Government military-to-military assistance program that
helps participant countries counter terrorist operations, border incursions,
and trafficking of people, illicit materials, and other goods.
ECONOMY
More than 80% of the work force is involved in agriculture--small-scale
subsistence farming, herding, and fishing. Like other developing countries,
Chad has a small formal sector and a large, thriving informal sector. In 2008,
Chad's GDP was estimated at approximately $8.4 billion, distributed among
agriculture (13.6%), industry (48.8%), and services (37.6%). Chad is highly
dependent on foreign assistance. Its principal donors include the European
Union, France, and the multilateral lending agencies. Petroleum, cotton,
cattle, and gum arabic are Chad's major exports.
Since 2000, a consortium of three oil companies--U.S.-based Exxon Mobil and
Chevron, joined by the Malaysian Petronas company--has been extracting oil
from wells in the south of Chad and sending it to market via a pipeline from
Chad through Cameroon to the Gulf of Guinea. The consortium has invested more
than $7 billion in the Chad-Cameroon petroleum pipeline project, which
originally had support from the World Bank in the form of Bank loans to Chad
and Cameroon to enable them to participate in the project. In return, the Chad
Government agreed to a set of unique mechanisms for World Bank, private
sector, government, and civil society collaboration to guarantee that future
oil revenues would benefit local populations and result in poverty
alleviation.
Economically, the project has been extremely successful, rewarding both the
consortium and the Chad Government with profits well beyond those initially
expected by either one. Chad’s oil exports to the U.S. make it the
sixth-leading African exporting country to the U.S.
The Chad-World Bank agreement did not prosper. Chad spent more on national
defense and less on socio-economic development than the original agreement
called for. That agreement was renegotiated in 2006, but the Bank did not
judge that Chad’s performance under the second agreement was acceptable.
Consequently, the Bank decided in 2008 to withdraw from the Chad petroleum
sector and asked the Chad Government for early repayment of its loans. The
Chad Government complied in 2009. The Bank and Chad continued to cooperate in
sectors other than petroleum through 2010, when the World Bank sent a resident
representative to Chad to broaden cooperation.
Primary markets for Chadian non-petroleum exports include neighboring Cameroon
and Nigeria and France, Germany, and Portugal. Cotton remains an important
export. The national cotton company--CotonTchad--is planned for privatization.
The parastatal has been poorly managed and cotton yields have been steadily
declining over the past several years.
The other major export is livestock--cattle, sheep, goats, and, camels--driven
to market or skins shipped to market in neighboring countries, particularly
Nigeria. Chad also sells smoked and dried fish to its neighbors and exports
several million dollars worth of gum arabic to Europe and the United States
each year. Other food crops include millet, sorghum, peanuts, rice, sweet
potatoes, manioc, cassava, and yams.
Chad's real GDP growth is estimated at 4.3% in 2010. Chad's economic
performance outside the oil sector continues to depend on fluctuations in
rainfall and in prices of its principal export commodities, especially cotton.
Public revenue management and corruption continue to plague Chad. The country
reached a decision point in 2001 for Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC)
debt relief and was receiving assistance from the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) and World Bank. By 2002, however, the country needed an extension on the
IMF Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF) program's performance
indicators. It continued to receive assistance from the international
financial institutions but struggled to meet the program's financial targets,
and the Fund ceased the program for non-performance. The IMF renewed
Fund-managed programs with Chad in 2008 and 2009, but the country was unable
to meet the targets and is not currently eligible to received IMF or HIPC
assistance.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Resident diplomatic missions in N'Djamena include the embassies of Algeria,
Cameroon, Central African Republic, China, Republic of the Congo, Cote
d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt, France, Germany, Nigeria,
Russia, Sovereign Military Order of Malta, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Sudan,
the United States, the European Union, and the African Union. Switzerland
maintains an aid mission. Turkey, Belgium, Togo, Senegal, Niger, South Korea,
India, Italy, the United Kingdom, Denmark, Canada, and Benin have honorary
consuls.
Chad is a principal and active member of the African Union and the United
Nations, as well as of the principal regional organizations, including the
Sahelo-Saharian Organization (SEN-SAD), the Economic Community of Central
African States (CEEAC), and the Economic and Monetary Union of Central African
(CEMAC). Chad has been an active champion of regional sectoral cooperation
through the Lake Chad and Niger River Basin Commissions and the Interstate
Commission for the Fight Against the Drought in the Sahel (CILS). In addition
to these organizations, Chad belongs to the Francophone Community (OIF);
African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States; African Development Bank;
Central African States Development Bank, Central African Economic Commission
for Livestock, Meat and Fishery Resources (CEBEVIRHA); Central African States
Bank (BEAC); Economic Commission for Africa; G-77; Inter-African Conference
for Insurance Markets; International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA);
International Civil Aviation Organization; International Confederation of Free
Trade Unions; International Criminal Court; International Development
Association; International Finance Corporation; International Fund for
Agricultural Development; International Federation of the Red Cross and Red
Crescent Societies; International Labor Organization; International Monetary
Fund; Interpol; International Olympic Committee; International Red Cross and
Red Crescent Movement; International Telecommunication Union; Non-Aligned
Movement (NAM); Islamic Development Bank; Islamic Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization; Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in
Africa (OHADA); Organization of the Islamic Conference; Organization for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons; Universal Postal Union; World Bank; World
Confederation of Labor; World Health Organization; World Intellectual Property
Organization; World Meteorological Organization; World Tourism Organization;
World Trade Organization.
U.S.-CHAD RELATIONS
Relations between the United States and Chad are good. The American embassy in
N'Djamena was established at Chadian independence in 1960. U.S. interests in
Chad include continued provision of humanitarian assistance to refugees and
internally displaced persons in eastern Chad and Central African Republic
refugees in southern Chad; continued Chadian commitment to efforts to
reinforce regional stability and security, especially in regard to the Darfur
crisis; continued Chadian progress toward a democratic transition, including
promotion of human rights and the rule of law; more responsible public-revenue
management to fuel sustainable socio-economic development; and continued
U.S.-Chadian cooperation on regional and international counterterrorism
efforts. There is no U.S. Agency for International Development mission or
Peace Corps program in Chad. A number of American voluntary agencies (notably
AFRICARE and AED) continue to operate in Chad.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Mark Boulware
Deputy Chief of Mission--Sue Bremner
Political/Economic Officer--Andrea Tomaszewicz
Consular/ Officer--Claire Rubino
Management Officer--Faith Rose
Public Affairs Officer--Sharon Blane
Humanitarian Assistance Coordinator--Michael Zorick
Development Assistance Coordinator--Leslie McBride
Regional Security Officer--Michael Cygrymus
Defense Attache--Lt. Col. Robert McKenna
The U.S.
Embassy in Chad is located on Avenue Felix Eboue, N'Djamena, (tel:
235-22-51-70-09, 235-22-51-90-52, or 235-22-51-92-33; fax 235-22-51-56-54).