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N’Djamena — Chad’s Independent Anti-Corruption Authority (AILC) has issued a public clarification following remarks by the finance minister that questioned the scale of financial adjustments announced by the agency.

In a statement released this week, the AILC said figures cited during International Anti-Corruption Day on December 9 — amounting to 910 billion CFA francs — covered audits carried out between 2021 and 2025. It stressed that the amount did not relate to a single fiscal year.

The authority said the adjustments resulted from detailed reviews of official accounting, financial and tax records submitted by audited entities. These reviews, it added, followed procedures set out in existing laws and allowed for responses from those concerned.

According to the AILC, the figures came from 37 audit missions conducted across a limited section of the public administration. Most of the adjustments involved what it described as illegal tax exemptions, unjustified tax relief, and irregular deductions linked to public procurement contracts. The authority also cited unexecuted contracts, cases of misappropriation, and public revenues collected but not transferred to the state treasury.

The AILC said it had so far recovered 22 billion CFA francs. It said the funds came from tax and customs authorities, electronic payment systems, and several public institutions, including ministries, the central city council, the treasury, and state-owned bodies. It added that documentation was available to support all recoveries.

The authority also reported compensation claims worth about 98.6 billion CFA francs, acknowledged by the entities concerned. Nearly half of that amount involved commercial banks, following intervention by the finance ministry to facilitate compensation arrangements.

The AILC said its role was to protect the public interest and promote transparent management of state resources. It added that it remained open to dialogue with government institutions and would continue its anti-corruption work.

(With MRTV French)

Djinodji Solmengar

Djinodji Solmengar Rodrigue is a journalist with MRTV English, Chad’s first English-language media outlet, where he led English-language news coverage at its launch. Based in N’Djamena, his reporting explores political, economic, and social developments, with particular attention to everyday realities, informal sectors, and cultural life. His work also extends to football and broader societal issues, approached through field reporting and in-depth storytelling. Beyond reporting, Djinodji regularly conducts interviews focused on education, including the teaching of English in Chad, as well as conversations (with AFROTRONIX, to name a few) on culture and music. He is also active as an English–French interpreter, working alongside international media professionals. In this capacity, he recently supported and interpreted for a delegation of foreign journalists, including BBC representatives, during the PND Chad Connexion 2030 mission. Alongside his professional practice, Djinodji is pursuing a PhD, with research centered on the presence of China and Russia in Africa as portrayed in selected Commonwealth online media. His academic interests lie at the intersection of media, geopolitics, and discourse analysis. Earlier in his career, he taught English and authored a Master’s thesis examining the contextualization of English language teaching in Chad, reflecting a sustained engagement with educational challenges and policy.