Even before the official results gave Deby more than 61 percent in Monday's ballot, the presidential
guard had parked many armoured vehicles on major junctions and thoroughfares.
AFP reporters said the number of troops on the streets
Friday appeared considerably larger than after previous elections.
Just hours before the official results were announced late
Thursday, Prime Minister Succes Masra had declared himself victor in the vote.
The former opposition leader appointed prime minister in
January, had warned that Deby's team would rig the results to ensure he won.
Masra urged Chadians to "mobilise peacefully but
firmly... to prove our victory".
The electoral commission said Masra had garnered only 18.53
percent of the vote.
The regime had long muzzled opposition figures and Deby's
main rival was killed in February.
The 40-year-old was proclaimed transitional president three
years ago by his fellow generals after his father, iron-fisted president Idriss Deby Itno,
had been shot dead by rebels after 30 years in power.
No stepped-up security was visible around the headquarters
of Masra's Transformers' party in the south of the capital on Friday.
But heavily-armed members of the presidential guard wearing
their distinctive red berets were out on main roads alongside a large number of
armoured vehicles, AFP journalists reported.
Anti-riot police in
black uniforms with their faces masked were also on the streets.
Chad capital calm
But the capital appeared calm ahead of Friday's Muslim
prayers and with shops and markets open as people went about their business.
Soldiers had let off repeated bursts of gunfire in the air
near the party HQ after the results were announced late Thursday, both in
celebration of Deby's win and to deter protesters from gathering.
Near the presidential palace, Deby's supporters had shouted,
sung, blasted car horns and fired their own guns in the air in celebration.
At least two teenagers were wounded by falling bullets, an
AFP journalist saw.
Several Chadians said they were waiting to hear if Masra
would be sacked or if he would resign.
"We know full well that Masra won," said Madallh
Ndonodji, a young man out in the popular Moursal area.
"We are waiting for orders from him, we can
react," he said.
Thirty-year-old Bonheur Nadjitessem said the election result
appeared "rigged".
"We have had enough of peaceful demonstrations, the
other side is armed," he said, sitting on his scooter.
"If we are to go out (on the streets), we need all the
people" out as well.
International human
rights groups had said the election would be neither credible nor
fair.
The vote marks the end of three years of military rule and
seals dynastic rule by the Deby clan in a country deemed crucial to the fight
against jihadism across Africa's Sahel desert
region.
The new president had promised free elections within 18
months when his fellow generals appointed him transitional leader in 2021.
His extension of the transition period by another two years
sparked major protests in October 2022 that were brutally repressed by the
police and army.
(AFP)
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