In Chad, almost three weeks after his appointment, Prime Minister Allamaye Halina obtained the confidence of the National Transitional Council on Thursday June 13, almost unanimously from the advisors present, after having delivered his general policy speech based on “12 projects » from the electoral program of Mahamat Idriss Deby in the last presidential election. A very ambitious program which aims to get the country out of underdevelopment. First reactions shared.
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For the radical opponent Max Kemkoye, it was a litany of promises that cannot be kept, as has been the case since the time of Idriss Deby senior, he said. Why such pessimism? Max Kemkoye was contacted by Esdras Ndikumana.
“ It is a general policy program of absolute platitude, a literal transposition of the famous project of Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno. A ghost project because inside, there is no substance. A government’s general policy program must be a program, at least with identifiable, quantifiable, achievable and evaluable projects.
But this is just pure literature, these are not even commitments. We cannot be in any way optimistic in the face of a system whose corruption, beyond being systemic, has become almost structural, in the face of the reign of generals, in the face of a sclerotic administration system. This political program is nothing but utopia. We always remain pessimistic” because this system, which was put in place “thirty years ago continues”, tackle Max Kemkoye.
Read alsoChad: Prime Minister Allamaye Halina delivered his general policy speech
On the side of the presidential movement, the president of the PDSA party and 3rd vice-president of the CNT, member of the coalition United Chadwho was the candidate of Mahamat Idriss Deby during the presidential election last May, he believes that this general policy speech is based on the aspirations of the Chadian people.
Malloum Yoboïdé Djilaki calls for not always being pessimistic and to give the head of government the benefit of the doubt. He was joined by Esdras Ndikumana.
“… in his speech, he said that his government is a government of action and not a government of promises… Let’s wait and see, let’s wait and see. We are not going to say already that because these thirty years there were too many unrealized promises that it was going to continue… No… I believe that it is a program which satisfies and which takes into account the whole of the aspirations of the Chadian people. We will wait three months to judge the Prime Minister and from there we will draw the conclusion: are these the same promises as over the last thirty years? Is there the beginning of change? So we are not always going to be pessimistic, yesterday and today are not the same. »