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Website of the SDC in Chad: www.swiss-cooperation.admin.ch/tchad/

CHAD.GIF

Chad is a priority country for bilateral aid. Ever since cooperation with this country began back in 1965, Switzerland has provided support for rural development, basic education and healthcare. Swiss aid programmes were initially intended to bolster public-sector development structures as well as the capacity of central government institutions. Over time, however, these programmes became more centred on helping family-owned agro-pastoral businesses and rural communities to better their living conditions and improve dialogue with state institutions and public services, the aim being to create conditions that would favour sustainable development. Still coming to terms with its recent past, Chad remains politically fragile to some extent and goes through periodic cycles of instability. Antagonism and political infighting affect the way the country is run. Early in February 2008, during a fresh outbreak of tension, the main armed opposition groups launched an offensive that rocked the government in power, thus heightening uncertainty about the country's stability. Similarly, the crisis in Darfur continues to be a destabilizing factor. Apart from the ensuing humanitarian disaster, the crisis has dangerously exacerbated tensions with neighbouring Sudan, destabilizing the entire subregion.

The Swiss Government's bilateral commitment
2007
mill. CHF
2008
mill. CHF
2009 *
mill. CHF
SDC
Bilateral development cooperation
10.71 8.54 9.50
Humanitarian aid
4.71 5.56 3.00
State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO)
Economic Cooperation and Development, WE
Total SDC/SECO commitment
15.42 14.10 12.50
Other Federal Offices
Federal Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport (DDPS)
0.20 0.06
State Secretariat for Education and Research (SER)
0.01 0.02 0.02
Total other Federal Offices
0.21 0.07 0.02
Total Swiss Government commitment
15.63 14.17 12.52
* planned
Bilateral development cooperation excluding program contributions to NGOs
– = nil

State Secretariat for Education and Research (SER) – 0.01 0.01
Total other Federal Offices
0.31 0.21 0.52
Total Swiss Government commitment
13.78 15.63 15.45
* planned
Bilateral development cooperation excluding program contributions to NGOs
– = nil


Development Cooperation: Priorities

The SDC’s strategy focuses on national poverty reduction policies as well as sectoral development policies in three key areas (i.e. agriculture and livestock breeding, healthcare and basic education). Through its regional development programmes, the SDC is active in the main regions of the country, particularly those with the least access to education, healthcare and economic infrastructure.

Switzerland’s cooperation programme in Chad is directed at strengthening the capability of family-owned agro-pastoral businesses, socio-professional associations, rural communities and municipalities, and decentralized public services and operates in three priority areas.

The SDC’s bilateral development cooperation programme in Chad aims to encourage partners to play an active role and improve their own capacity and resources. In addition, it plans to achieve a better gender balance by helping more women to gain access to education, training and services. Besides focusing on stimulating links between communities, local authorities and decentralized public services, the programme also helps to reinforce the balance between the country’s main regions and communities since the present unequal access to development processes, public services and infrastructure is a frequent source of conflict in Chad.

The SDC is unanimously recognized for its grassroots approach with rural populations, its efficient action and pioneering efforts to bring about effective decentralization. Through its Cooperation Office, the SDC also maintains political dialogue with Chad’s national government and various international organizations that provide technical and financial aid to the country (i.e. UNDP, World Bank, European Union, USAID, the French Development Agency, GTZ, etc.). Through constant dialogue, the SDC seeks to promote the potential lever effect of its grassroots programmes on national development choices and policies and programmes in the priority sectors.


 Geographical priorities

The programme is centred on three focal points designed to tap the potential and complementarities of the country's main regions and reduce regional inequalities:


Humanitarian Aid: Priorities

Since 2003, approximately 235,000 people fleeing persecution in Darfur have taken refuge in eastern Chad in an environmentally fragile Sahel-Saharan region. Switzerland has responded with humanitarian aid, contributing three to four million CHF a year to the programmes of the ICRC, the UNHCR and the WFP since 2004. Experts have been seconded to UNHCR to set up refugee camps and guarantee appropriate management of the environmental resources and water supplies, both for refugees and the local population. Water and the environment, the sectors on which SDC/HA contributions focus, are vital for protecting the refugees and meeting the vital needs of the local population.

The humanitarian situation in Chad has manifestly deteriorated since 2006 because of the sub-regional dynamics of the conflicts in Darfur, the Central African Republic and Chad ( Information about Sudan ). The clashes between the Central African Armed Forces (FACA) and the armed opposition in the north of the Central African Republic have driven some 48,000 refugees to seek refuge in southern Chad. But above all, many civilians have already been wounded in the internal conflict between Chad's National Army and armed opponents of the regime, and nearly 140,000 have been internally displaced, with numbers rising steadily, especially in the south-east of the country. Switzerland has adapted its humanitarian response to these new requirements with contributions to Doctors without Borders Switzerland, the ICRC and the WFP. On 28 January 2008, the situation suddenly deteriorated. Armed opposition groups launched an offensive which carried the fighting to N'Djamena, with devastating humanitarian consequences. According to the ICRC, more than 150 people were killed and nearly one thousand injured in the skirmishes, while 20,000 sought refuge in Cameroon where their living conditions are worsening by the day. This situation calls for the putting in place of humanitarian structures to which Switzerland is contributing.
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Country profile: Chad

Facts and figures
Surface area
Population
Annual population growth rate (since 1990)
Life expectancy at birth women / men
Adult illiteracy rate: women / men
Gross Domestic Product GDP per capita
Percentage of population with less than 2 USD per day
1'284'000
10.5
3.4
52 / 49
87 / 59
450
..
km2
mill.
%
years
%
USD
%
Source: World Bank's World Development Indicators 2008
Background information provided by the BBC

Local SDC contact address:

Chad (N'Djamena)

Bureau de la Coopération Suisse au Tchad
B.P. 1102
N'Djamena - Tchad

Phone +235 251 73 14
Fax +235 251 74 16
Email ndjamena@sdc.net
Website www.swiss-cooperation.admin.ch/tchad/

Additional Information and Documents

Here, you will find more publications, links, documents and articles about Swiss development cooperation and humanitarian aid in this country.