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Chad: first batch of police trained by UN to protect refugees deployed to east of country

Chad: first batch of police trained by UN to protect refugees deployed to east of country

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The first contingent of Chadian police trained by the United Nations to protect refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) will begin their deployment in the volatile east of the country today.

Some 100 members of the contingent, known as the Détachement Intégré de Sécurité (DIS), will leave from the capital, N’Djamena, in batches of 25, according to a press release issued by the UN Mission in the Central African Republic and Chad (MINURCAT) yesterday.

The DIS police will be under the leadership of a central commander and two deputies, and have been trained by MINURCAT to provide security in the many camps for refugees and IDPs scattered across eastern Chad.

The camps collectively contain 250,000 refugees and 180,000 IDPs fleeing conflict and insecurity in Chad, the CAR or the neighbouring Darfur region of western Sudan.

MINURCAT has just completed training an additional 111 members of the DIS, adding to the 320 others who have already been trained. Eventually a total of 850 DIS members will be trained by the mission.

Set up in September last year, MINURCAT includes a multi-dimensional UN presence and a European Union military force (EUFOR) that are jointly trying to bring stability to eastern Chad and north-eastern CAR, which have been beset by widespread fighting and civilian displacement in recent years.