'Apocalyptic scene' after Chad raid*
Reports from eastern Chad suggest the violence is going from bad to
worse. The UN refugee agency's Matthew Conway has just returned from the
villages of Tiero and Marena where there was a brutal raid on 31 March
2007. He told the BBC News website what he saw.
It was shocking, apocalyptic - a scene of utter desolation and destruction.
It happened at first light so the villagers were caught totally unawares
Attacks like this happen repeatedly, but the scale of this one and the
ferocity of it was startling - even to those of us who have been here
for some time.
These were fairly large villages and clearly relatively prosperous: rich
agricultural fields; neatly assembled houses and they were more or less
completely destroyed in these attacks.
Hundreds upon hundreds of homes had been burned to the ground, and a
small fire was still burning in one section of Tiero village.
An overwhelming stench came from the rotting carcasses of domestic
animals such as donkeys, goats and chickens that had been hit by stray
bullets, consumed by fire or died of thirst, as the owners had no time
to untie them.
Two-pronged attack
All the villagers had fled - there was no-one left except a few people
who started to come back to try to salvage whatever belongings survived
the fires that were set to the villages.
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Some had located the bodies of dead family and friends and were
struggling to bury them with some very basic tools.
In fact we came across the bodies of an elderly man of 70 and the other
a 30-year-old father of eight who had been shot dead about 1km from
their village.
It's hard to know what the circumstances were but given eyewitness
testimony, they were most likely running for their lives and chased down
by the attackers.
Evidence collected so far indicates it was a two-pronged attack - very
well co-ordinated and premeditated.
It happened at first light so the villagers were caught totally
unawares. Some of the men would have been at mosque for morning prayers.
From one direction came the so-called Janjaweed militia on horseback
and camelback - whether these were Janjaweed from Sudan or Chad, it is
hard to know.
It appears that they consisted of a mix of various ethnicities, not
solely Arab, and in some cases the assailants were known to the villagers.
The other prong of the attack appears to have been led by an unknown
faction of Chadian rebels.
They were wearing military uniforms, were very well armed and arrived in
vehicles.
Common graves
Given that many essential household goods, food and domestic animals
were left behind, the residents had little time to flee.
Rotting carcass of a donkey (Picture: UNHCR)
Owners had no time to untie their livestock
Sadly, I don't think we're ever going to know the exact number of those
who died as people fled in different directions.
Estimates now put the death toll at between 200 to 400.
A lot of bodies were buried in common graves simply as a necessity
because of decomposition occurring in the intense heat.
These communal graves are scattered in all different directions mainly
along the roadside where people were killed and then buried by their kin
who were able to get back there.
Many who survived the initial attack, died in subsequent days from
exhaustion and dehydration.
Along the route to the villages abandoned belongings can be seen of
those who collapsed.
People displaced by other raids had been living in the villages
alongside local residents. Tiero had a combined population of 4,000 and
Marena of about 3,500.
It appears that the majority of the villagers have gone to the
displacement site of Habile (about 45km west of Marena and Tiero).