Tracing the ‘Green Sahara’ in Chad’s northern desert

Djimet Guemona, 35, an archeologist, clears the area where an archaeological dig will take place at the Garoa Hallagana rock art site, in Ennedi Ouest province, Chad. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 19 September 2025
Follow

Tracing the ‘Green Sahara’ in Chad’s northern desert

  • Since the RNCE was included on the UNESCO World Heritage list in 2016, the Chadian government brought in the South African organization, African Parks, to help run it for 15 years
  • Tens of thousands of engravings and paintings can be found on the rocky walls across the vast reserve’s more than 50,000 square kilometers

N’DJAMENA: A cloud of dust escapes from an excavation site in the sand of Chad’s arid north, where scientists are looking for signs of human habitation in an area once humid and called the “Green Sahara.”
Kneeling, armed with a brush and trowel inside the largest rock shelter at the Gaora Hallagana site in the Ennedi West province, Djimet Guemona, 35, meticulously removed every layer of sand.
“It’s as if we are turning the pages of a historic book to travel back in time,” said Guemona, an archaeologist at the National Center for Research and Development.
His face lit up at the discovery of each fragment of pottery or scrap of charcoal.
The scientific mission, conducted over five days in late July some 30 kilometers (nearly 19 miles) from Fada, the main town in Ennedi West, brought together Chadian archaeologists and geologists from universities in N’Djamena and Abeche.
It aimed to lay “the first cornerstone” of the chronological framework for ancient settlements in Ennedi, Guemona said.
The Natural and Cultural Reserve of Ennedi (RNCE) was created in 2018 in the Chadian province, which stands at the crossroads with Libya and Sudan and is home to a rich archaeological heritage.
Tens of thousands of engravings and paintings can be found on the rocky walls across the vast reserve’s more than 50,000 square kilometers (19,305 square miles).
Since the RNCE was included on the UNESCO World Heritage list in 2016, the Chadian government brought in the South African organization, African Parks, to help run it for 15 years.
The head of the scientific mission funded by the group, Mahamat Ahmat Oumar, said 1,686 sites had been catalogued so far.
“But this likely represents less than a quarter of the total,” he said.
“There is enormous archaeological potential but it remains poorly documented,” Oumar added. “Research has been dominated by foreign scientists.
“Chadian researchers have not sufficiently invested in this part of the country.”

- Tourism -

Some sandstone rock formations, tinted pink, purple or orange depending on the time of day, are hard to access.
Even venturing onto the imposing blocks, which look like they have been placed on top of the sand, is a physical and logistical challenge in a province scorched by the sun.
Certain areas have also long been inaccessible due to the border region’s tumultuous history.
“There was a break in scientific exploration in the 1960s with the civil war until the 1990s,” said Oumar.
Remnants of shells and tank debris from the Chad-Libya war of 1978 to 1987 are still present and travel to the area remains “strongly discouraged” by the foreign ministry of the former colonial power France.
“It’s Lascaux times 100,000,” joked Frederique Duquesnoy, 61, an archaeologist and associate member of the Mediterranean Laboratory of Prehistoric Europe and Africa (LAMPEA), referring to the network of caves in southwest France famous for its ancient wall art.
Using a phone and a tablet, she employs an image enhancement tool to reveal paintings invisible to the naked eye.
“This herd of domestic cattle reflects a period when there were pastures, gallery forests and waterways here,” she said, pointing to a sandy stretch in front of the cave.
“It corresponds to the so-called ‘Green Sahara’ period” between 10,000 and 3,000 years BC, she added.
Further evidence of the humid era are the depictions of hippopotamuses, giraffes and elephants found in other rock shelters.
Fragments of pottery collected by Celestin Gabi, a 35-year-old Chadian doctoral student in archaeology at France’s University of Toulouse Jean Jaures, seem to support the hypothesis.
Some, adorned with wavy patterns, “could date back to 7,000 BC,” he said.

- Understanding -

After surveys and potential carbon-dating of the collected materials, the next step will be to organize large-scale digs to deepen understanding of the people who lived in Ennedi during the Early Holocene period and how they adapted to increasingly dry conditions.
“Better understanding this heritage will allow us equally to showcase it to the public and to attract a large number of visitors each year,” said Oumar.
“At the moment, only a handful of travel agencies share a market catering to wealthy tourists.”
The Chadian authorities are currently drafting a tourist development plan and African Parks hopes it will be finalized by the first half of next year.
“The only way of self-funding the preservation of this heritage is tourism,” said Hamid Kodi, 28, the deputy director of RNCE.
African Parks is the second biggest employer in the province after the state, with 149 staff.
The NGO, which oversees around 20 parks across Africa, has previously faced accusations of “neo-colonialist practices” and rights violations.
In Ennedi, African Parks promotes a more responsible management and its “support” for local people, in particular by assigning “management to young people in the region,” Kodi, who himself comes from Ennedi, said.


About 400 immigrant children were detained longer than the recommended limit, ICE admits

Updated 8 sec ago
Follow

About 400 immigrant children were detained longer than the recommended limit, ICE admits

  • A Dec. 1 report from ICE indicated that about 400 immigrant children were held in custody for more than the 20-day limit during the reporting period from August to September
  • Advocates documented injuries suffered by children and a lack of access to sufficient medical care

TEXAS, USA: Hundreds of immigrant children across the nation were detained for longer than the legal limit this summer, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement has admitted in a court filing, alarming legal advocates who say the government is failing to safeguard children.
In a court filing Monday evening, attorneys for detainees highlighted the government’s own admissions to longer custody times for immigrant children, unsanitary conditions reported by families and monitors at federal facilities, and a renewed reliance on hotels for detention.
The reports were filed as part of an ongoing civil lawsuit launched in 1985 that led to the creation of the 1990s cornerstone policy known as the Flores Settlement Agreement, which limits the time children can spend in federal custody and requires them to be kept in safe and sanitary conditions. The Trump administration is attempting to end the agreement.
A Dec. 1 report from ICE indicated that about 400 immigrant children were held in custody for more than the 20-day limit during the reporting period from August to September. They also told the court the problem was widespread and not specific to a region or facility. The primary factors that prolonged their release were categorized into three groups: transportation delays, medical needs, and legal processing.
Legal advocates for the children contended those reasons do not prove lawful justifications for the delays in their release. They also cited examples that far exceeded the 20-day limit, including five children who were held for 168 days earlier this year.
ICE did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.
Hotel use for temporary detention is allowed by the federal court for up to 72 hours, but attorneys questioned the government’s data, which they believe did not fully explain why children were held longer than three days in hotel rooms.
Conditions at the detention facilities continued to be an ongoing concern since the family detention site in Dilley, Texas, reopened this year.
Advocates documented injuries suffered by children and a lack of access to sufficient medical care. One child bleeding from an eye injury wasn’t seen by medical staff for two days. Another child’s foot was broken when a member of the staff dropped a volleyball net pole, according to the court filing. “Medical staff told one family whose child got food poisoning to only return if the child vomited eight times,” the advocates wrote in their response.
“Children get diarrhea, heartburn, stomach aches, and they give them food that literally has worms in it,” one person with a family staying at the facility in Dilley wrote in a declaration submitted to the court.
Chief US District Judge Dolly Gee of the Central District of California is scheduled to have a hearing on the reports next week, where she could decide if the court needs to intervene.