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2001 Chadian presidential election

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2001 Chadian presidential election

← 1996 20 May 2001 2006 →
Turnout61.37%
 
Candidate Idriss Déby Ngarlejy Yorongar
Party MPS FAR
Popular vote 1,533,509 396,864
Percentage 63.17% 16.35%

 
Candidate Saleh Kebzabo Wadel Abdelkader Kamougué
Party UNDR URD
Popular vote 169,917 146,125
Percentage 7.00% 6.02%

President before election

Idriss Déby
MPS

Elected President

Idriss Déby
MPS

Presidential elections were held in Chad on 20 May 2001. Incumbent President Idriss Déby of the Patriotic Salvation Movement was re-elected with 63% of the vote.

Candidates

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Déby stood as a candidate for a second term, and was supported by former opponent, Lol Mahamat Choua, leader of the Rally for Democracy and Progress (RDP).

Results

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CandidatePartyVotes%
Idriss DébyPatriotic Salvation Movement1,533,50963.17
Ngarlejy YorongarFederation, Action for the Republic396,86416.35
Saleh KebzaboNational Union for Democracy and Renewal169,9177.00
Wadel Abdelkader KamouguéUnion for Renewal and Democracy146,1256.02
Ibni Oumar Mahamat SalehParty for Liberty and Development70,2482.89
Delwa Kassiré KoumakoyeNational Rally for Development and Progress57,3822.36
Jean Alingué BawoyeuUnion for Democracy and the Republic53,5132.20
Total2,427,558100.00
Valid votes2,427,55897.21
Invalid/blank votes69,6572.79
Total votes2,497,215100.00
Registered voters/turnout4,069,09961.37
Source: African Elections Database

Aftermath

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The election results, showing a first-round majority for Déby, were contested by all of the opposition candidates. On 28 May the six opposition candidates were briefly arrested after meeting at the home of one of them, Saleh Kebzabo, and four opposition activists were killed in the action. They were released half-an-hour later.

Two days later, the six candidates and as many as 40 activists were once again arrested as the opposition prepared to lead a funeral procession for one of those killed two days earlier. They were all released after a direct phone call to Déby from the World Bank's President James Wolfensohn.

Déby was sworn in for another term on 8 August.[1]

References

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  1. ^ "LE PRÉSIDENT DÉBY VEUT FAIRE PLUS ENCORE" Archived February 28, 2008, at the Wayback Machine Diplomat Investissement, March–April 2006, p9