Chad

Casualties and Victim Assistance

Last updated: 17 September 2014

Summary action points based on 2013 findings

·         Victim Assistance coordination was ineffective, while survivor identification and needs assessment continues to be much needed.

·         Increased services are needed in all areas of victim assistance, particularly physical rehabilitation and employment.

·         There is an acute need for improved facilities and professional capacity in the rehabilitation sector. Government investment and support to rehabilitation and emergency care is also needed to ensure sustainability.

·         The ICRC reported allocation of funding from the European Union (EU) to strengthen the existing center in N’Djamena. Although limited, donor funding is making an impact that could be significantly increased through such cooperation.

Victim assistance commitments

The Republic of Chad is responsible for a significant number of landmine survivors, cluster munition victims, and survivors of other ERW who are in need. Chad has made commitments to provide victim assistance through the Mine Ban Treaty and has victim assistance obligations under the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Casualties

Casualties overview

All known casualties by end 2013

At least 2,889 (1,155 people killed; 1,535 injured; and 198 unknown)

Casualties in 2013

9 (2012: 15)

2013 casualties by outcome

1 killed; 8 injured (2011: 5 killed; 10 injured)

2013 casualties by device type

9 undefined mine types

The Monitor recorded nine mine/ERW casualties in Chad.[1] However, given the lack of national data collection and reporting systems, it is probable that there were a larger number of new casualties that were unreported. Similarly, data reported for previous years was inconsistent and not indicative of trends: 15 casualties were reported in 2012, 34 in 2011, and 28 in 2010.[2] In early 2014, one single incident killed five civilians and injured an additional 15 when their cars drove into an unmarked minefield in northern Chad.[3] In addition, for the first half of 2014 the National Demining Center (Centre National de Déminage, CND) reported a significant increase in casualties with 43 new victims.[4]

At least 2,889 mine/ERW casualties had been identified by the end of 2013: 1,155 people were killed, another 1,535 injured, and 198 unknown.[5]

The number of casualties caused by cluster munition remnants or the use of cluster munitions in Chad remained unknown due to a lack of detailed and comprehensive data collection.[6]

Victim Assistance

The total number of mine/ERW survivors in Chad is not known, though there were thought to be more than 1,607.[7] Between 1998 and 2013, the CND estimated that there were at least 2,834 survivors and family members of people killed by mines/ERW registered in Chad but recognized that this data was not complete.[8]

Victim assistance since 1999

Services for mine/ERW survivors in Chad have been hampered by intermittent internal conflict and cross-border conflicts, as well as serious under-funding. Data on mine/ERW casualties is not adequate for use; information on the needs of survivors was not available. Most services were provided by the ICRC. An overall need to establish services and capacities outside the capital N’Djamena remained, especially in remote and affected areas such as the northern part of the country.

As of 2013, to access most services many survivors still needed to be transferred to N’Djamena, where the existing facilities were; however, the facilities were few and inadequate in view of the needs. Rehabilitation was limited to just two centers and those services were not free of charge unless covered by the ICRC, which also continued to provide a referral system and local staff training. There was a persistent lack of physiotherapists and trained service providers; none worked in mine-affected areas. Psychosocial support, vocational training, and economic reintegration opportunities for survivors and persons with disabilities were extremely limited; the situation was exacerbated by widespread societal discrimination against them. Legislation addressing persons with disabilities was not adequately enforced. Government attention to victim assistance increased through 2010 and 2011 with the development of the National Action Plan on Victim Assistance, which was adopted in May 2012. However, few initiatives were undertaken in 2013 to implement this action plan[9] despite the adoption of an implementation strategy for the action plan during the year.[10]

There were no significant changes in the accessibility, availability, or quality of victim assistance services in Chad in 2013.

Assessing victim assistance needs

In 2013, no survivor needs assessments were made in Chad. The CND country-wide mapping study of all mine/ERW survivors announced in 2011 as part of the implementation of the newly adopted National Action Plan on Victim Assistance was never reported to have been completed as planned; a census of mine victims and assessment of their needs was identified as a priority of the implementation strategy of the action plan adopted in 2013.[11]

Victim assistance coordination[12]

Government coordinating body/focal point

The CND’s Directorate of Awareness and Victim Assistance (Directorat de la Sensibilisation et Assistance aux Victimes)

Coordinating mechanism(s)

Directorate of Awareness and Victim Assistance through ad hoc meetings with relevant ministries and service providers

Plan

In May 2012, Chad adopted its 2012–2014 National Plan of Action on Victim Assistance; in 2013 the plan was extended to the period 2013–2017

This first National Plan of Action on Victim Assistance was adopted in May 2012, to be implemented from 2012–2014.[13] Because of lack of resources for its implementation, little progress had been made towards achieving the objectives set out in the action plan and consequently in 2013 it was decided to extend the timeframe of the plan to 2017.[14]

The plan recognizes the principle of non-discrimination between mine/ERW victims and other victims and persons with disabilities.[15] The plan of action identifies five key objectives:

1.      Contact each survivor through organizations of mine/ERW victims and disabled persons’ organizations (DPOs) and assess their needs and the best way to respond.

2.      Identify and reinforce community networks (including DPOs).

3.      Map and improve victim assistance activities.

4.      Develop a network of actors within the communities to provide psychological support and provide information on available services to victims.

5.      Identify and train all service providers in affected regions on victim assistance and improve accessibility to services in all parts of the country.[16]

The objectives of the National Plan of Action on Victim Assistance have also been included in the Strategic Mine Action Plan 2013–2017.[17] In 2013, Chad developed and adopted an implementation strategy for the action plan which includes the following objectives:

1.      Launch a national victims’ survey immediately.

2.      Promote the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) and its implementation.

3.      Improve access to primary care, rehabilitation services, and psychological support after an incident and in the longer term.

4.      Encourage and support inclusive development of mine/ERW victims and persons with disabilities.

5.      Promote the rights of victims and persons with disabilities among families, communities, and governmental ministries in order to eradicate discriminatory practices.

6.      Ensure coordination among actors, including a follow-up and update of the National Plan of Action on Victim Assistance with the participation of all relevant stakeholders.

7.      Mobilize national and international resources in order to implement the National Plan of Action on Victim Assistance.[18]

No victim assistance coordination meetings were reported having been organized by the CND in 2013.[19] In May 2013, the Ministry of Public Health signed a decree creating a working group to specifically address physical rehabilitation needs in Chad entitled Network of Rehabilitation Actors in Chad (Réseau des acteurs de la rehabilitation au Tchad).[20] It started working in July 2013.[21] Members of this network include representatives of the CND, representatives of the Ministry of Public Health and of the Ministry of Social Welfare, Family and National Solidarity (Ministry of Social Welfare) , international organizations such as UNICEF, the ICRC, the two rehabilitation centers, and specialists, as well as mine survivors and other DPOs.[22]

Implementation of the draft rehabilitation action plan had been delayed due to the ongoing problems with victim assistance, including financial difficulties, the distance of rehabilitation centers from affected areas, and a lack of international technical assistance. However, in 2013 funding from the European Commission was designated to the Kabalaye Physical Rehabilitation Center (Centre d’Appareillage et de Rééducation de Kabalaye, CARK) for a three-year project.[23]

Ministry of Social Welfare is responsible for protecting the rights of people with disabilities, including access to rehabilitation services.[24]

Chad provided updates on progress and challenges for victim assistance at the Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty in Geneva in December 2013.[25] In January 2013, Chad submitted its first Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 report since 2010. Form J provided an overview of casualties of mines/ERW over the years 2010 to 2012 and recognized that little had been done in the past on victim assistance due to lack of funding.[26]

Inclusion and participation in victim assistance

In 2013, the ICRC reported working closely with survivor associations, especially in affected areas, to gather information and enhance referrals to rehabilitation centers.[27] Survivors did not participate in international meetings of the Mine Ban Treaty or Convention on Cluster Munitions as part of their country’s delegation.

Service accessibility and effectiveness

Victim assistance activities[28]

Name of organization

Type of organization

Type of activity

Changes in quality/coverage of service in 2013

Ministry of Social Welfare

Government

Conducting a micro-credit project for persons with disabilities

Unknown

CND

National mine action center

Registering all known mine/ERW survivors in order for them to access free healthcare; distribution of some mobility aids; advocacy for the ratification of CRPD

Ongoing

Chad National Paralympics Committee

National authority

Advocacy to ensure that persons with disabilities have access to training to become “sports educators”

Ongoing

Voice of People With Disabilities (Voix des Personnes Handicapées, VPH)

National NGO

Social inclusion and psychological support activities using a community-based approach; advocacy for the ratification of the CRPD

Ongoing

CARK

National NGO

Physical rehabilitation and prostheses in N’Djamena

Increased sustainability of services by obtaining funding from the EU for a three-year project

Notre Dame House of Peace (Maison Notre Dame de Paix à Moundou, MNDP)

National NGO

Physical rehabilitation in Moundou, southern Chad

Ongoing

Association of Mutual Aid of Physically Disabled of Chad (Association d’Entraide aux Handicapés Physique du Tchad, AEHPT)

National NGO

Advocacy, psychological support, and social inclusion for all persons with disabilities

Ongoing

ICRC

International organization

Support for improved emergency and continuing medical care at Abéché regional hospital; support for physical rehabilitation, through CARK and MNDP

Ended its support for the Abéché hospital in November 2013

Emergency and continuing medical care

During 2013, there was relative stability with the end of armed conflict that had been ongoing since 2010. In response, the ICRC scaled back its emergency activities to focus mainly on providing surgical care in the east and treatment to amputees throughout the country.[29] The Abéché hospital maintained its emergency, surgical, and physiotherapy capacities with regular financial and material support as well as training from the ICRC, including through an ICRC surgical team that had been at the hospital since 2009. Amputees received good quality post-surgical care from two ICRC-trained and financed physiotherapists. However, in November 2013 the ICRC ended its support to the hospital and found that as a result the independent long-term functioning of the hospital could not be guaranteed despite its measures to transfer supervision to the national authorities.[30]

Physical rehabilitation, including prosthetics

Access to rehabilitation remained difficult for most of those in need in 2013. Rehabilitation services were only available in six of the 23 regions in Chad. Access to rehabilitation was hampered by the lack of financial support from the social system to cover the cost of rehabilitation treatment, the lack of facilities and professionals, and the burden of the cost of transport (when it was available).[31] There was no direct involvement by the government in physical rehabilitation and patients had to pay for services.[32]

In 2013, the ICRC continued to support the two functioning centers, CARK in N’Djamena and MNDP in Moundou, where 4,501 persons with disabilities, including mine/ERW survivors, were treated. Mine/ERW survivors received more than 20% of the prosthetic and orthotic devices made from ICRC-supplied components at the two rehabilitation centers.[33] Staff training also enhanced the quality of services.[34]

The ICRC continued to provide financial and logistical assistance to survivors for increasing access to rehabilitation services by allowing survivors living in remote areas, especially from the northern part of the country, to come to N’Djamena’s rehabilitation centers. The ICRC paid for transportation to the capital and for physical rehabilitation costs including prostheses and physiotherapy services.[35] Following the demolition of the AEHPT-run accommodation center in August 2010 which had been used by the ICRC for patients coming from outside the capital,[36] only a limited number of beneficiaries with particular difficulties, especially children and those without any family members in N’Djamena, were provided with accommodation and food during their rehabilitation.[37] Throughout 2013, the ICRC advocated for the ministries for health and social affairs to increase their investment in physical rehabilitation services to ensure that the CARK becomes less dependent on ICRC involvement in the future. It also conducted activities to identify additional international partners.[38]

Laws and policies

The law protects the rights and prohibits discrimination against persons with disabilities. However, while the government made efforts to enforce it in N’Djamena, it was unable to do so throughout the country. No legislation or programs exist to ensure access to buildings for persons with disabilities.[39]

Chad signed the CRPD in September 2012.[40] On 26 March 2013, Chad ratified the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[41]

 



[1] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, Mine Victim Assistance Director, National Demining Center (Centre National de Déminage, CND), 17 July 2014. The ICRC recorded in its annual report that it provided emergency support to seven people injured by ERW. See ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, pp.131 and 134. The Monitor assumes that these seven casualties have been included in the data of the CND.

[2] The CND reported 44 new mine/ERW casualties (13 killed and 31 injured) between 2010 and 2012 but did not provide differentiated data for each year. However, the total figure was inconsistent with previous CND reports of annual casualty rates and Monitor casualty data. In 2010, the CND reported 64 casualties for 2009, but by 2011 the 2009 casualty figure had been revised to 39. Email from Assane Ngueadoum, Technical Advisor for Strategic Planning and Operations, CND, 14 March 2011. Of the 131 casualties reported in Chad for 2008, 122 casualties were recorded by the CND and nine were identified through media monitoring from 1 January 2008 to 31 December 2008. Monitor analysis of CND, “General list of mine/ERW victims/2008” (“Liste générale des victims des mines et autres engines non explosés/2008”), provided by Assane Ngueadoum, CND, N’Djamena, 15 April 2009; and email from Assane Ngueadoum, CND, 22 May 2009.

[3] Mine Advisory Group news report, “You probably didn't hear about this tragedy - because it happened in Chad, not Chelsea,” 20 February 2014; and Alwihda actualités, “Tchad : 5 morts et 9 blessés dans l'explosion de mines,” 13 February 2014.

[4] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 17 July 2014.

[5] In 2008, Chad reported that by December 2007, 2,632 casualties were recorded (1,143 killed; 1,489 injured). There were 131 casualties reported in 2008, 39 in 2009, 28 in 2010, 34 in 2011, and 15 in 2012. See previous editions of the Monitor on the Monitor website; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 17 July 2014.

[6] Handicap International (HI), Circle of Impact: The Fatal Footprint of Cluster Munitions on People and Communities (Brussels: HI, May 2007), p. 48. It is likely that there have been unexploded submunition casualties in Chad. However, despite ERW incidents in regions contaminated by cluster submunitions, unexploded submunition casualties were not differentiated from other ERW casualties. Landmine Impact Survey data also showed that the most common activity at the time of each incident was tampering with ERW.

[7] The Monitor calculates that in total some 1,659 survivors have been reported through various sources. At least 1,588 survivors had been identified by CND through December 2008. An additional 67 casualties were reported in 2009 and 2010, of which at least half were likely injured based on previously reported ratios of killed to injured casualties. Twenty-eight additional survivors were reported in 2011 and 10 in 2012. See previous editions of the Monitor; ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, pp. 131 and 134.

[8] Statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Twelfth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2012; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 17 July 2014.

[9] See previous country reports and country profiles at the Monitor on the Monitor website; HI, Voices from the Ground: Landmine and Explosive Remnants of War Survivors Speak Out on Victim Assistance, Brussels, September 2009, p. 66; statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013; response to Monitor questionnaire by Anne Catherine Roussel, ICRC, 7 April 2014; and email from Anne Catherine Roussel, ICRC, 9 April 2014.

[10] Statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013.

[11] Ibid.; statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Twelfth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2012; response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 2 April 2013; and email from Zakaria Maiga, ICRC, 29 March 2013.

[12] Statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Victim Assistance and Socioeconomic Reintegration, Geneva, 23 May 2012; Chad National Plan of Action on Victim Assistance 2012–2014, May 2012; response to Monitor questionnaire by Zakaria Maiga, ICRC, 21 March 2013; statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013; response to Monitor questionnaire by Anne Catherine Roussel, ICRC, 7 April 2014; ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014; response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 2 April 2013; response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 17 July 2014; United States (US) Department of State, “2013 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Chad,” Washington, DC, 27 February 2014; and Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form J, 1 January 2013.

[13] Statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Victim Assistance and Socioeconomic Reintegration, Geneva, 23 May 2012.

[14] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 17 July 2014.

[15] Chad National Plan of Action on Victim Assistance 2012–2014, May 2012, p. 4.

[16] Ibid., p. 5.

[17] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 2 April 2013.

[18] Statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013.

[19] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Anne Catherine Roussel, ICRC, 7 April 2014; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 17 July 2014.

[20] Statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p.132.

[21] ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p. 132.

[22] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 2 April 2013; and statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013.

[23] ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p. 132.

[24] US Department of State, “2013 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Chad,” Washington, DC, 27 February 2014, p. 23.

[25] Statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013.

[26] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form J, 1 January 2013.

[27] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zakaria Maiga, ICRC, 21 March 2013; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p. 132.

[28] ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014; response to Monitor questionnaire by Anne Catherine Roussel, ICRC, 7 April 2014; ICRC Physical Rehabilitation Programme (PRP), “Annual Report 2012,” Geneva, 2013; ICRC PRP, “Annual Report 2010,” May 2011, Geneva; response to Monitor questionnaire by ICRC, 16 April 2012; response to Monitor questionnaire by Zakaria Maiga, ICRC, 21 March 2013; US Department of State, “2013 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Chad,” Washington, DC, 27 February 2014; statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013; ICRC Press Release, “Tchad: ratification de la Convention sur les armes à sous-munitions,” 4 April 2013; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 17 July 2014.

[29] ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, pp. 130 and 131; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Anne Catherine Roussel, ICRC, 7 April 2014.

[30] ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, pp. 130–132; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Anne Catherine Roussel, ICRC, 7 April 2014.

[31] ICRC PRP, “Annual Report 2012,” Geneva, 2013.

[32] ICRC PRP, “Annual Report 2012,” Geneva, 2013; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p. 130.

[33] ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p. 134.

[34] Eight technicians upgraded their qualifications through courses in Togo run by the ICRC Special Fund for the Disabled, while another eight technicians and physiotherapists attended courses in Benin and in Togo. ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p. 132.

[35] ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p. 132.

[36] ICRC PRP, “Annual Report 2010,” May 2011, Geneva, p. 25.

[37] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by ICRC, 16 April 2012; and by Zakaria Maiga, ICRC, 21 March 2013.

[38] ICRC, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 14 May 2014, p. 132.

[39] US Department of State, “2013 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Chad,” Washington, DC, 27 February 2014, p. 23.

[40] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zienaba Tidjani Ali, CND, 17 July 2014.

[41] Statement of Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013; and ICRC Press Release, “Tchad: ratification de la Convention sur les armes à sous-munitions,” 4 April 2013.