# taz.de -- Migration policy in Chad: In the middle, on the edge
       
       > More people are seeking refuge in Chad than trying to emigrate. This is
       > why the country has received less focused attention from the EU so far,
       > despite its central location.
       
 (IMG) Bild: Refugees from Nigeria in Camp Baga Sola in Chad
       
       The Republic of Chad, which has been independent from the former colonial
       power of France since 11 August 1960, holds no specific bilateral agreement
       on migration with France and/or the EU at present. However, most recently,
       the Republic of Chad is also becoming involved in the EU's efforts toward
       migration control at the borders of the Sahel, as well as on the national
       borders of Libya.
       
       When Chad gained independence as a state, the French Republic and the
       Republic of Chad signed an agreement that comprised the central African
       country's entry into the Multilateral Convention, a multilateral agreement
       on the basic rights of the members of states in the French-speaking
       community. On the basis of the Convention, members of these contracting
       party states enjoyed the effective freedom to settle within the borders of
       France.
       
       Beginning 10 March 1961, this agreement was valid for members of all French
       ex-colonies in Africa, excluding only the Republic of Guinea, which was to
       be “punished“ for political reasons. The agreement guaranteed them freedom
       to enter the country as long as they carried a carte d’identité – a form of
       personal identification – or a passport, even if the passport had expired
       up to five years earlier. Furthermore, members of these relevant states
       were guaranteed access to all employment positions on French soil, even in
       public service.
       
       When compulsory possession of a residence permit and a work permit became
       established law in France, via two simple ministerial ordinances (from the
       ministries of labour and the interior) starting on 30 November 1974, the
       French Republic unilaterally put an end to the previous legal status. In
       the same time period, the agreements with the African Francophone states in
       question began to be renegotiated. Incidentally, just prior to this in
       1973, Chad, for its part, had already announced its revocation of the
       multilateral convention from 22 June 1960.
       
       In Chad's case, this phase led to a complete elimination of all special
       distinctions for citizens of Chad, in a shift to the “general“ law for
       national foreigners, which had already been issued as significantly more
       restrictive. This was not the case for all former French colonies in
       Africa.
       
       ## Minimal migration to the EU
       
       On 6 March 1976, several new co-operation agreements between the French
       Republic and the Republic of Chad were signed, all of which took effect in
       1978. From then on, citizens of Chad in France lived juristically under the
       “normal“ law on national foreigners. At first, in a transitional phase, the
       previous regulations that had been more favourable to entry and settlement
       still applied to Chad nationals. After January 1981, however, they
       definitely fell under the “usual“ foreign national law, which is still the
       case today. More favorable regulations that deviate from the norm, such as
       those in France for citizens of the Cameroon, do not exist.
       
       The European Union (EU), for its part, has not reached any specific
       agreement with the Republic of Chad on the subject of migration. The issue
       still has an influence on common bilateral co-operation. One reason for
       this could be that migration by Chad nationals to the EU has been minimal
       in numbers to date. Statistics from 2016 from the European office Eurostat
       count 50 to 80 asylum applicants from Chad per month for the entire EU.
       
       The European Union (EU), for its part, has not reached any specific
       agreement with the Republic of Chad on the subject of migration, although
       the issue still influences general bilateral co-operation. One reason for
       this could be that migration by Chad nationals to the EU has been minimal
       in numbers to date. Statistics for 2016 from the European office Eurostat
       count 50 to 80 asylum applicants per month from Chad for the entire EU.
       
       In France, the National Court of Asylum – the court of appeal for asylum
       procedures – issued decisions on 108 cases from Chad nationals in all of
       2013, out of a total of 38,540 decisions. Of these 108 asylum applications,
       the court of appeals approved only 17; the rate of rejection stood at 84
       percent. Visa applications of all kinds submitted to the French consulate
       in Chad numbered 4,568 overall in the year 2010 and 4,417 overall in 2011.
       Where numbers are concerned, therefore, the country is not a “marked“
       migrant country of origin.
       
       The EU's collaboration with Chad, which was financed in the period from
       2008 to 2013 in the amount of €328 million from the European Development
       Fund, EDF, officially focused mainly on the following points: Constructing
       a transparent justice system, “good government leadership“ and improved
       transparence in the financial administration; improvement to living
       conditions, primarily for the rural population; better provision of food
       supplies; better provision of health services. In the inspection reports
       for the EDF, however, remarks on the subject of “migration movements“ can
       also be found, such as those in Appendix XII of the annual report for 2003.
       
       ## Focus on neighbour countries
       
       Represented by its authoritarian president, Idriss Déby Itno, who has held
       office since 1990, the Republic of Chad took part in the summit between the
       EU and African states in the Maltese capital of Valletta. Yet the country
       does not appear on the list of those states to whom preferential
       “partnerships“ or “pacts“ on migration control were to be offered in the
       framework of the so-called Valletta Process, such as Niger and Nigeria –
       two countries that directly border on Chad – as well as tSenegal, Mali and
       Ethiopia, plus Jordan and Libya with regard to refugees from Syria.
       
       Chad is a founding member of the so-called “Sahel G5“ group of states in
       the Sahel zone. The group was founded on 16 February 2014 in the
       Mauritanian capital Nouakchott. A summit of the G5 group took place on 20
       November 2015 in Chad's capital N’Djamena; the UN High Representative for
       Foreign Affairs and Security, Federica Mogherini, also took part. On this
       occasion, the issues of “areas of security policy, of border
       administration, migration, counterterrorism, as well as the prevention of
       (Note: Islamic) radicalism“, among others, were defined as topics for a
       “regional coordination“, as well as for the “co-operation between Sahel G5
       and the European Union“.
       
       On 19 May 2016, the EU Commission presented 20 new actions to benefit
       stability and combat the underlying causes of illegal migration in the
       entire Sahel region. These were to be financed by the EU Trust Fund for
       Africa that had been launched at the Valletta summit, for a total amount of
       €280 million. Chad was not listed as a specific target country; however,
       eight of the actions affect the “Lake Chad Basin“, which is bordered by
       Niger, Nigeria and the Cameroon as well as Chad, with a focus upon
       “combatting the Boko Haram sect“.
       
       ## Police of the Sahel zone
       
       On 13 June 2016 the EU Commission in Brussels outlined a further “six
       actions“ for the Sahel area for which total costs to the Africa Trust Fund
       were estimated at €146 million. The following trans-national goals were
       listed: “managing/controlling migration movements, combatting human
       trafficking“ as well as the favouring of “return and reintegration“.
       Additionally, at a cost totaling €41.6 million, trans-national “robust,
       flexible, mobile and interdisciplinary“ police units – bearing the French
       acronym GAR-SI Sahel, which stands for “Rapid Action Groups for
       Surveillance and Intervention“ were to be established. As specific
       expenditures for Chad, moreover, €10.3 million were earmarked for
       vocational integration for young Chadians “with poor or non-existent school
       education“.
       
       Precedents for these actions could be evidenced in a response by the German
       government on 13 July 2016 in the Bundestag to a minor interpellation from
       the Bündnis 90/Green Party lobby, titled, “Measures for Chad“ in the
       context of the Valletta Process, such as employment policy “around Lake
       Chad“ with financing in the amount of €27 million. From the side of the
       German federal government, promotional policy measures were specified on
       the one hand, (€20 million for the livestock farming sector), and on the
       other hand, a programme to manage the impacts of the crisis in the
       bordering Central African Republic (€12 million) as well as “security and
       counterterrorism“ (€8 million).
       
       On 17 June 2016 , EU Representative Mogherini and the foreign ministers of
       the Sahel G5 countries met with the press in Brussels. Together with
       Chadian Minister Moussa Faki Mahamat, Mogherini held a specific press
       conference in this context. The goals cited by Ms. Mogherini were
       “development, the creation of jobs – especially for young people – but
       also, counterterrorism and the fight against human trafficking (and)
       illegal migration“. At the occasion of the joint press conference,
       Mogherini went into further detail on EU missions in Mali and in Niger,
       however, in regards to Chad, she spoke of “the control and management of
       the borders in the South of Libya“ as the task of urgent priority, also in
       regards to dealing with “waves of migration passing through Libya“.
       
       ## More engagement
       
       The Chad regime, for its part, is calling for collaboration from the
       European side “to curb the influx of migrants toward Europe“, as formulated
       by the authoritarian President Idriss Déby Itno on 12 October 2016 in
       Berlin – where he was visiting at the invitation of Federal Chancellor
       Angela Merkel. On this occasion, Déby claimed that the EU should seek
       “broader solutions with all the Sahel states“ instead of favouring only
       “bilateral agreements with Mali or Niger“.
       
       This could, and should, be understood as a call to involve his country more
       intensely than before in multilateral efforts toward migration control. In
       any case, up until now, Chad has played a minor role in this matter,
       compared to Niger, Mali or Senegal. One reason for this may lie in the fact
       that the number of Chadian citizens living or arriving in Europe is
       relatively small, while at the same time, the country is more of a refuge
       and receiving location than an exit country for refugees.
       
       Due to the conflicts in neighbouring countries and regions such as the
       Sudan (Darfur) and especially in the Central African Republic, Chad is
       currently hosting about 700,000 refugees. In this context, Federal
       Chancellor Merkel met with authorities in N’Djamena in October 2016 and
       approved €8.9 million in aid money. From the standpoint of the EU powers,
       their primary concern is that refugees from the Sudan and Central African
       Republic will be able to find reception and support in their neighbour
       country of Chad, but will not hit upon the idea of moving on toward Europe.
       
       12 Dec 2016
       
       ## AUTOREN
       
 (DIR) Bernard Schmid
       
       ## TAGS
       
 (DIR) migControl
       
       ## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA