From 1979 to 1982, Chad experienced unprecedented change and spiraling violence. Southerners finally lost control of what remained of the Chadian government, while civil conflicts became significantly more internationalized. In early 1979, the fragile Malloum-Habré alliance collapsed after months of aggressive actions by Habré, including demands that more northerners be appointed to high government offices and that
Arabic be used in place of
French in
broadcasting. Appealing for support among the large communities of
Muslims and
Arabs in
N'Djamena, Habré unleashed his
Armed Forces of the North (FAN) on February 12. With the French
garrison remaining uninvolved, FAN sent Félix Malloum into retirement (under French protection) and drove the remnants of the
Chadian Armed Forces (FAT, the regular army) toward the south. On February 22, Goukouni Oueddei and the
People's Armed Forces (FAP) entered the capital. By this time, most of the city's
Sara population had fled to the south, where attacks against Muslims and nonsoutherners erupted, particularly in
Sarh,
Moundou, and throughout
Moyen-Chari Prefecture. By mid-March more than 10,000 were said to have died as a result of violence throughout the south. In early 1979, Chad became an open arena of unrestrained factional politics. Opportunistic power seekers sought to gather followers (often using
sectarian appeals) and to win support from Chad's
African neighbors. Between March 10 and August 21, four separate conferences took place in the
Nigerian cities of
Kano and
Lagos, during which Chad's neighbors attempted to establish a political framework acceptable to the warring factions. Chad's neighbors, however, also used the meetings to pursue interests of their own, resulting in numerous externally generated complications and a growing number of factions brought into the process. For example, at one point, the Libyan leader Gaddafi became so angry with Habré that the Libyan sent arms to
Colonel Wadel Abdelkader Kamougué's anti-Habré faction in the south, even though Kamougué was also anti-Libyan. At the second conference in Kano, both Habré and Goukouni were placed under what amounted to
house arrest so Nigeria could promote the chances of a
Kanembu leader,
Lol Mahamat Choua. In fact, Nigerian support made Choua the Chadian titular head of state for a few weeks, even though his Third Liberation Army was only a phantom force, and his domestic political support was insignificant. Within Chad the warring parties used the conferences and their associated truces to recover from one round of fighting and prepare for the next. == Goukouni becomes head of the GUNT ==