[ALJAZEERA] Chad's governing party has taken the majority of seats in last month's parliamentary election that was mostly boycotted by opposition parties, according to provisional results.
President Mahamat Idriss "Lil" Deby's party, the Patriotic Salvation Movement, has secured 124 of the 188 seats at the National Assembly, Ahmed Bartchiret, head of the electoral commission, announced late on Saturday.
The participation rate was put at 51.56 percent, which opposition parties said showed voter doubts about the validity of the contest.
The December 29 election was presented by Deby's party as the last stage of the country's transition to democracy after he took power as a military ruler in 2021.
The takeover followed the death of Deby's father and longtime President Idriss Deby Itno, who spent three decades in power. Mahamat Deby eventually won last year's disputed presidential vote.
The vote, which also included municipal and regional elections, was Chad's first in more than a decade.
Deby had said the election would ''pave the way for the era of decentralisation so long-awaited and desired by the Chadian people'', referring to the distribution of power beyond the national government to the various provincial and municipal levels.
'CHARADE'
The election was boycotted by more than 10 opposition parties, including the main Transformers party, whose candidate, Succes Masra, came second in the presidential election.
The main opposition had called the election a ''charade'' and expressed worries that it would be a repeat of the presidential vote, which election observers said was not credible.
Last month's vote came at a critical period for Chad, which is battling several security challenges — from attacks in the Lake Chad region by the Boko Haram
... not to be confused with Procol Harum, Harum Scarum, possibly to be confused with Helter Skelter. The Nigerian version of al-Qaeda and the Taliban rolled together and flavored with a smigeon of distinctly Subsaharan ignorance and brutality...
gang to ending decades-long military cooperation with La Belle France, its former colonial power.
The severing of military ties echoes recent moves by Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso
...The country in west Africa that they put where Upper Volta used to be. Its capital is Oogadooga, or something like that. Its president used to be Blaise Compaoré, who took office in 1987 and was chased out in 2014. Now it's the usual army officer type guy, Captain Ibrahim Traore, running things, who's just doing a bang-up job unless he's already been deposed...
, which all kicked out French troops and fostered closer ties with Russia after a string of coups in West and Central Africa's Sahel region
... North Africa's answer to the Pak tribal areas...
This week, security forces foiled an attack on the presidency that the government referred to as a ''destabilisation attempt''.
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