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French President Emmanuel Macron and Chadian President Mahamat Idriss Déby met in Paris at the end of January 2026 and agreed to open a new chapter in bilateral ties after more than a year of tension following N'Djamena's abrupt termination of a long‑standing defence agreement in November 2024.
The talks, preceded by a verbal invitation delivered in N'Djamena by France's ambassador, produced a joint commitment to a “revitalised partnership” focused on economic cooperation — notably in energy, digital technology and agriculture — and framed by “mutual respect” rather than a security‑first agenda.
No new security pact was announced; France completed the withdrawal of its last troops from Chad on 31 January 2025.
The rapprochement comes amid Chad's moves to diversify partners, including a recent memorandum with Belarus, and as Paris seeks to recalibrate its Sahel policy after force reductions across the region.
Both leaders signalled continued dialogue to implement agreed orientations, while also addressing regional crises such as the conflict in Sudan.
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RFI - All the news from France, Europe, Africa and the rest of the world.Chad, France eye economic cooperation as they reset strained ties




















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