Thousands mourn Chad's Idriss Deby, rebels say their command hit by airstrike

Thousands of people gathered in Chad's capital N'Djamena on Friday for the state funeral of President Idriss Deby, whose death while leading his troops against a rebel offensive has thrown the country into crisis.
Mourners included President
Emmanuel Macron of France, which counted on the long-ruling strongman as a
lynchpin in the war against Islamist militants, and a host of African
presidents and prime ministers.
Rebel forces meanwhile said their
command center was bombed on Wednesday night in an attempt to kill their own
leader.
The rebels swept south this month
across the vast desert nation from their bases in Libya towards N'Djamena and
say they are about 200-300 kilometers (125-190 miles) from the capital. They
called a temporary ceasefire to allow Deby's funeral to take place.
Before the ceremony on Friday
morning, Macron and regional leaders met with Deby's son Mahamat Idriss Deby
and members of the military transition council that has taken charge in
N'Djamena.
They offered their common support
towards a civilian-military transition in Chad for the good of regional
stability, a French presidency source said.
"Unity of views. The G5 is mobilized alongside
Chad," the source said.
The so-called G5 Sahel countries
are Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger -- all beset by Islamist
militant threats.
The 37-year-old Mahamat Idriss
Deby, who holds the rank of general, has dissolved parliament and taken over as
president and armed forces commander.
The self-appointed council has
said it will hold democratic elections in 18 months. But opposition leaders have
condemned the takeover as a coup and called for a campaign of civil
disobedience, while an army general said many officers were also opposed to the
transition plan. Unions have also called a worker's strike.
The late president, whose 30-year
rule was marked by repression, was an ally of Western powers and his death has
raised worries that more turmoil and uncertainty will hamper the fight against
Islamist militants who are spreading across Africa.
Thousands of people gathered in a
solemn mood in N'Djamena's main Place de la Nation to pay their respects to him.
Dignitaries exchanged greetings on
red carpets under the square's silver arches, while women dressed in black
wiped away tears.
Deby's coffin, draped in a
national flag, was carried on a military pickup truck flanked by a motorcycle
escort. Loud weeping swelled from the crowd as it arrived at the square and a
21-gun salute boomed across the city. Macron was the first dignitary to
approach the coffin, bowing before it.
"He protected us for so long that today we have
come to wish him eternal rest. A deserved rest," said N'Djamena resident
Hassan Adoum, who attended the ceremony.
On the frontline
Rebels of the Front for Change and
Concord in Chad (FACT) said that warplanes had bombed their center on Wednesday
night in an attempt to kill their leader, Mahamat Mahadi Ali. They accused
France of supporting the raid with aerial surveillance.
"Our command was bombed on the orders of the
military junta with the complicity of foreign agencies present in our
country," FACT said in a statement.
The group, which was formed by
dissident officers in 2016 and is not linked to Islamists, did not specify
where the command post was located or give details of any casualties or damage.
The French army said on Friday it
had not carried out any airstrikes this week in Chad. Chad's army did not
respond to a request for comment.
French diplomatic and military
sources have indicated that Paris would seriously consider intervening if the
rebels were to close in on N'Djamena and threaten the stability of the country,
a former French colony.
"Things will heat up and that could force us to
intervene at one point," a French diplomatic source told Reuters. "We
saw from Central Africa that it is harder to stabilize a country once the chaos
is in place."
An immediate objective was to
persuade Mahamat Idriss Deby to reduce the transition period and forge unity
within the establishment, the source said.