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    General Miskine: Charilogone Confirms the Absence of an ICC Warrant

    Image: Chadian President Marshal Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno and General Abdoulaye Miskine
    By: The #Charilogone Editorial Team

    After years of investigation and cross-checking, Charilogone returns to a case that has continued to provoke confusion and concern: that of General Abdoulaye Miskine. Since his arrest under the regime of the late Marshal Idriss Déby Itno, his name has circulated through the corridors of power—often surrounded by rumors, rarely accompanied by truth.

    According to a Chadian source close to the case, Marshal Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno recently granted an audience to a former detainee, Baradine Berdei Targuio. During this exchange, Targuio—marked by his encounter with General Miskine at Klessoum prison—reportedly asked a simple, almost human question: “Why keep him in prison without trial?”
    A question that echoes common sense in a case that has become increasingly opaque.

    The response attributed to the president was that the general is “wanted by the ICC.” A heavy, almost definitive claim. Yet it is based on nothing. No warrant. No document. No official mention. Nothing.
    The International Criminal Court itself, contacted by the general’s lawyers, confirmed in writing that Abdoulaye Miskine is not wanted.

    Behind this false information, our investigations reveal another side of the affair: that of Chadian officers who, hidden within the security apparatus, would deliberately fuel this confusion. A manipulation that raises questions, especially knowing that some of them were involved in the arrest of General Abdoulaye Miskine.

    And at the center of it all, a man.
    A man weakened by illness.
    A man who was a mediator, a signatory of the Khartoum Peace Agreement of February 6, 2019, a peace actor sought out by the late Marshal Déby.
    A man who, for more than six years, has lived behind the walls of Klessoum prison in N’Djamena, alongside three of his companions.
    A man still waiting for a trial that never comes.

    The prolonged detention of General Miskine—without any international legal basis, without trial, without horizon—raises a simple yet essential question: what is justice worth when it drifts away from humanity?

    By: The Charilogone Editorial Team

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