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Drone Attack From Sudan Kills 17 in Chad, Chadian Government Says

N’DJAMENA, March 19 (Reuters) – A cross-border drone ⁠attack ⁠from Sudan killed 17 ⁠people in Chad including mourners attending a funeral ​service, the Chadian government and local sources said on Thursday, and ‌the country’s president vowed to ‌retaliate for any further attacks.

The border town of Tine ⁠was struck ⁠on Wednesday afternoon as mourners gathered at a house for ​a funeral ceremony for a dead relative that involved reading the Koran, a local resident said.

There were two explosions and casualties included ​mourners and children who had been playing nearby, said the resident, ⁠who ⁠declined to be identified ⁠for ​security reasons.

Local government sources said it was not immediately clear who was ​behind the attack.

The ⁠conflict in Sudan between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, which began in April 2023, has periodically spilled into Chadian territory, causing casualties and property damage.

Chad closed its eastern ⁠border with Sudan last month after clashes linked to the ⁠war killed five Chadian soldiers.

In a statement issued early on Thursday, the government said Chad had strengthened its security presence at the border and could potentially carry out operations on Sudanese territory.

The office of Chad President Mahamat Idriss Deby said in a statement late on Wednesday that Deby had ordered the army to retaliate against any attack ⁠from Sudan.

Two local government sources had earlier put the toll at 16 killed and 10 wounded. A military source said all the dead and injured were civilians.

(Reporting by Mahamat Ramadane ​and Reade Levinson; Writing by Anait Miridzhanian; Editing by ​Robbie Corey-Boulet and Timothy Heritage)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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