Fidèle Abdelkérim Moungar (born 1948) is a Chadian politician who served as Prime Minister of Chad in 1993. He is currently Secretary-General of Chadian Action for Unity and Socialism (ACTUS), a left-wing opposition party.

Life edit

Moungar is an ethnic Sara,[1] born in 1948 in Doba in the Logone Oriental Region, who has practiced as a surgeon in France.[2] He started his political career when, along with other exiles, he founded ACTUS, a party hostile to both the FROLINAT and Wadel Abdelkader Kamougué's de facto government of southern Chad, the Comité Permanente du Sud, in May 1979 in Paris.[3]

In 1992, two years after the rise to the presidency of Idriss Déby, he became Minister of Education in the government led by Jean Alingué Bawoyeu.[4] At the Sovereign National Conference (CNS), a reconciliation conference representing most Chadian factions that was first convened on January 15, 1993,[5]

Moungar was elected as transitional Prime Minister on 6 April 1993, receiving 444 votes against the 334 received by Adoum Helbongo.[6] He succeeded Alingué as the 5th Prime Minister of Chad on 7 April.[7]

Moungar formed a transitional government including 16 ministers,[8] in which all party leaders had a post;[9] among these, Saleh Kebzabo became Trade and Industry Minister, Delwa Kassiré Koumakoye became Communications Minister and Wadel Abdelkader Kamougué became Civil Service and Labour Minister. In a message on Radiodiffusion Nationale Tchadienne, Moungar asserted his cabinet's loyalty to the CNS' instructions, claiming that his ministers would be the CNS' "missionaries".[10]

Moungar's tenure in office was marked by confrontation with the President over the pace for adopting a multiparty political system, a confrontation that a Chadian journalist dates from June, when during a presidential visit to France Idriss Déby noted that Moungar was highly regarded by the French government. This made Déby conclude that Moungar might transform himself in a dangerous rival for the presidency. He was also led to suspect this, together with rival opposition leaders, by Moungar's conduct and speeches, which indicated a considerable ambition, despite his previous promise that he had no political interest in remaining in politics after the transition period. This brought the downfall of the Moungar cabinet on 28 October 1993, when the President's supporters presented a censure motion in transitional parliament, the Conseil Supérieur de Transition (CST).[11][12]

The CST (the country's transitional legislature charged with the task of monitoring the government's implementation of the CNS' recommendations[13]) approved the motion with 45 votes against 10, and 1 abstained,[12] displaying what the scholar William Miles calls "a good example of their deference to the Presidency", which repeated itself when the CST readily accepted Déby's candidate for Prime Minister, the Justice Minister Delwa Kassiré Koumakoye.[14] Moungar called his removal unconstitutional, threatening to bring the issue to court, while workers went on strike, deserting their jobs.[15]

In 1996, Moungar was disqualified from participating in the first Chadian multi-party presidential election for alleged residence irregularities.[16]

In January 2007, Moungar strongly criticized French policy in Chad, asking for the recall of the French troops stationed in Chad. He claimed that "France has crucified Chadian democracy, systematically contributing to the faking of all elections, and, through the intervention of its troops, has caused the repression of all rebellions, in open violation of the Franco-Chadian accords."[17]

On 30 July 2007, Moungar returned to Chad along with a delegation of about 20 other exiled opponents of the regime to meet with Déby and discuss how to restore peace to the country; he and the rest of the delegation returned to Libreville, Gabon on the same day.[18] In November 2007, he said that he was outraged that France wanted the defendants in the Arche de Zoé child kidnapping case to be tried in France rather than Chad.[citation needed]

As of 2009, Moungar remains Secretary-General of ACTUS.[19] As part of a peace initiative in February 2009, he met with Deby and then travelled to Khartoum to meet with Chadian rebel leaders.[20]

Private life edit

Moungar's eldest daughter, Vanessa Moungar, was born in 1984 and works at the African Development Bank.[21]

References edit

  1. ^ Daddieh, Cyril K.; Mengisteab, Kidane (1999). State Building and Democratization in Africa: Faith, Hope, and Realities. Praeger Publishers. p. 175. ISBN 978-0-275-96353-8.
  2. ^ "Premier ministre de transition au Tchad". L'Humanité. 7 April 1993. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007.
  3. ^ Lanne, Bernard (November 1984). "Le Sud, l'État e la Révolution" (PDF). Politique Africaine (16): 30–44. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 October 2005.
  4. ^ Amnesty International Report 1994 - Chad, UNHCR web site.
  5. ^ Nolutshungu, Sam C. (1995). Limits of Anarchy: Intervention and State Formation in Chad. University of Virginia Press. pp. 254–255. ISBN 978-0-8139-1628-6.
  6. ^ Bernard Lanne, "Chad: Regime Change, Increased Insecurity, and Blockage of Further Reforms", Political Reform in Francophone Africa (1997), ed. Clark and Gardinier, page 278.
  7. ^ Guy Arnold, Chad, Year in Review: 1993, Britannica.com.
  8. ^ U.S. Department of State (1993). "Chad". Country Reports on Human Rights Practices.
  9. ^ "Un gouvernement "a la française"". La Lettre du Continent. 22 April 1993.
  10. ^ Roy May & Simon Massey (January 2000). "Two Steps Forward, One Step Back: Chad's Protracted 'Transition to Democracy'". Journal of Contemporary African Studies. 18 (1): 107–132. doi:10.1080/025890000111995. S2CID 153511449.
  11. ^ Buijtenhuijs, Robert; La Conférence nationale souveraine du Tchad: un essai d'histoire immédiate, 207-208
  12. ^ a b Pierre, Subtil Marie (30 October 1993). "Le gouvernement de transition a été renversé". Le Monde.
  13. ^ Zartman, I. William (1995). Collapsed States: The Disintegration and Restoration of Legitimate Authority. Lynne Rienner Publishers. pp. 30–31. ISBN 978-1-55587-560-2.
  14. ^ Miles, William F. S. (March 1995). "Tragic Tradeoffs: Democracy and Security in Chad". The Journal of Modern African Studies. 33 (1): 53–65. doi:10.1017/S0022278X0002084X.
  15. ^ "Workers stay out in Chad protest". Boston Globe. 30 October 1993.
  16. ^ C. Daddieh & K. Mengisteab, State Building and Democratization in Africa, page 180.
  17. ^ "Fidèle Moungar: 'La France a crucifié la démocratie au Tchad'", Panapress (Afrik.com), 23 January 2007 (in French).
  18. ^ "Une innovation dans la démarche de restauration de la paix au Tchad". Chadian government web site (in French). 31 July 2007. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
  19. ^ "Parti ACTUS : Séance de travail du Secrétaire Général Fidel MOUNGAR avec le Coordinateur National Adjam PATALET et DINGAMYO Secrétaire National" Archived 2009-05-04 at the Wayback Machine, vocalfruits.com, 8 May 2009. (in French).
  20. ^ "Tchad: Moungar entre N'djamena et Khartoum", wmaker.net, 9 February 2009 (in French).
  21. ^ "Conseil présidentiel pour l'Afrique : qui sont les Africaines de Macron ?". La Tribune (in French). Retrieved 15 November 2019.
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Chad
April 7, 1993 – November 6, 1993
Succeeded by