N'Djamena, 26 September, 2025 / 8:23 pm (ACI Africa).
Members of the Union of Christian Executives of Chad (UCCT) have urged the country’s President, Mahamat Idriss Déby Itno, to realize the separation of religion from the State, guarantee equal justice, and end what they describe as “religious discriminations” in the landlocked country at the crossroads of North and Central Africa.
In an open letter issued Thursday, September 25 and addressed to President Déby, UCCT members say their appeal was made “not by defiance, but with seriousness, hope, and by moral and patriotic obligation,” stressing that it is rooted in “the breath of the Gospel Beatitudes and the call to justice of the Holy Qur’an.”
They note that the initiative was not to divide but “to awaken the conscience of the nation” in the face of threats to Chad’s constitutional principles of secularism, equality, and unity.
Highlighting concrete grievances, the Lay executives decry “the growing imprint of a single religious denomination in the institutions of the Republic.” They also mention the construction of mosques in public institutions, government involvement in organizing the Muslim annual pilgrimage known as the Hajj, and official speeches limited to Muslim religious feasts.
“May our country remain a common space for all, without religious favouritism,” UCCT members say.






