Tensions between
President Faure Gnassingbe's government and the opposition have
heightened following parliament's approval of a contested constitutional reform
critics say is a bid to keep Togo's leader
in power.
The presidency
announced Wednesday that more consultations were needed over the reforms and suspended the April 20 legislative and
regional elections without giving a new date.
Four opposition
parties and a civil society group issued a statement calling for
protests on April 11, 12 and 13.
"The signatories
vigorously condemn the regime's manoeuvre, which attempts by all means to
endorse its own constitutional coup," the opposition statement said.
The reform dispute has
fuelled debate over the rule of Gnassingbe, who has been in power since 2005
after succeeding his father, who governed for three decades after a military
coup.
Fearing an attempt to
keep Gnassingbe in power, opposition leaders say they want the government to
withdraw the reform, which allows the National Assembly to elect the president
directly.
Nine members of the
opposition group Dynamique Monseigneur Kpodzro were detained by police in Lome
after campaigning in a market about the illegality of the reform, party
spokesman Thomas Kokou N'soukpoe said.
Public prosecutor
Talaka Mawama said an investigation had been launched against "individuals
caught distributing leaflets and chanting slogans inciting popular revolt"
on Wednesday.
After a week of
political tensions, Gnassingbe had already sent the law back to parliament for
a second reading.
"The Togolese are
angry and they want this constitutional bill to be withdrawn altogether.
Otherwise they are creating disorder," said Nathaniel Olympio, head of the
opposition Party of the Togolese.
"This time, this
constitutional coup will not pass... This time the Togolese people will stand
up and say 'no'."
No mandate
West Africa is
struggling with fallout from a series of military coups, while Senegal last
month generated hope for the region by electing a youthful newcomer to the
presidency.
Togo's parliamentary
elections had been delayed before, with the opposition claiming the assembly,
dominated by Gnassingbe's ruling UNIR party, had lost its mandate because of
the lack of a vote.
The constitutional
reform has already sparked tensions, with police breaking up a recent
opposition press conference and a group of influential figures calling for
protests.
Togo's civil service
minister Gilbert Bawara told a radio station Thursday that consultations were
needed before the vote to ensure transparency about the reforms.
"I believe that
it is logical and out of respect for the candidates, out of respect for the
Togolese people, out of respect for the voters, that they know the rules of the
game before going to the competition," he said.
Togo's parliament in
March adopted the law that would introduce a switch from a presidential to a
parliamentary system, handing the assembly the power to elect the president for
a single six-year term.
Assembly members would
elect the president "without debate", according to the new
constitution. But it was not clear whether the president could run for another
term.
The law also
creates the post of "president of the council of ministers" as a type
of designated prime minister, who will have power over the government. The post
is also elected by lawmakers.
In 2019, members of
parliament revised the constitution to limit presidential terms to two, but it
did not apply retrospectively, allowing Gnassingbe to stand for the next two
elections.
Source: AFP
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