Accra, Feb 20, GNA - The West African regional body ECOWAS on Saturday suspended Togo from the organisation and imposed travel ban on the country's leaders as well as arms embargo.
ECOWAS Chairman President Mamadou Tandja of Niger, who announced the sanctions, said member countries were to recall their Ambassadors from Togo with immediate effect.
The ECOWAS Chairman said a committee comprising Benin, Ghana, Mali, Niger and Nigeria would work with the Executive Secretary to determine the modalities for the implementation of the sanctions.
ECOWAS Heads of State and Government in their declaration after the Niamey Summit of February 9, this year, decided, among other things, that failure to allow a transitional process in conformity with the Togolese Constitution, as amended in December 2002, would lead to the imposition of sanctions by the sub-regional body.
The decision to impose the sanctions is therefore being taken, following the declaration by the Togolese government that it will hold elections within 60 days while maintaining the situation created by the February 5 installation of Mr Faure Eyadema as interim President of the Republic after the death of his father, Gnassingbe Eyadema. The ECOWAS Chairman, President Tandja considers the declaration to have fallen far short of the expectations and demands of ECOWAS leaders. The Executive Secretary, Dr Mohamed Ibn Chambas also underscored the need for the speedy return to constitutional legality in accordance with the ECOWAS Protocol on Good Governance and Democracy and undertakes to continue to work with the Togolese government towards the realization of this objective. ?I have decided in the superior interest of the nation, to follow the transition process in accordance with the constitution... and to organise a presidential election within the constitutional timeframe of 60 days,? Gnassingbe said late Friday in a long-awaited television broadcast to the nation.
?I will assure the continuity of the country while we wait for a new president to be elected,? said Gnassingbe, dressed in a dark suit, his eyes flitting off-camera.
Riots have erupted on the streets of the capital, Lome, since the army installed the burly 39-year-old as successor to his father, Gnassingbe Eyadema, who ruled this small West African country with a rod of iron for 38 years until his death on 5 February.
The government has admitted that at least four protesters were shot dead by security forces during clashes over the last week.
Another opposition rally to protest at the father-to-son-transmission of power took place in Lome on Saturday, but passed off without any trouble.
Thousands of young people marched through the streets of the suburb of Be, an opposition stronghold, blowing whistles, banging plastic drums and waving red, yellow and green Togolese flags above their heads. Many of them carried crudely written placards saying ?Togo is not a monarchy.?
With the government having lifted its ban on public demonstrations on Friday, the security forces maintained a low-key presence and did not intervene.
Meanwhile, thousands of Gnassingbe supporters gathered peacefully across town outside Lome 2, the presidential residence, for a counter rally.
Following Eyadema?s death, the army suspended the constitution before installing his son in power. It then recalled parliament to tweak the constitution and the electoral code to legitimise Gnassingbe?s accession and postpone presidential elections until 2008.
However, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the African Union, former colonial ruler France and the United Nations all demanded a return to the old constitution, which foresaw power passing to the head of the national assembly, Fambare Ouattara Natchaba, and elections in early April.
Togo's alliance of six opposition parties immediately slammed Gnassingbe?s decision to remain in power and forged ahead with a fresh protest demonstration.
Opposition angry
"With this declaration, he is continuing the coup d'etat. He will bear the responsibility for the destruction of Togo," Leopold Gnininvi, head of the Democratic Convention of the African People (CDPA) opposition party, told IRIN on Friday night, minutes after Gnassingbe had stated his intention to remain in power.
"I beg the international community to come to our aid quickly to stop the danger while there's still time," the one-time professor added. "We risk having the same situation here as in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Cote d? Ivoire."
The government shrugged off accusations that Gnassingbe?s decision to cling to power meant there had not been a complete return to the constitutional order.
It pointed out that parliament had hastily sacked Natchaba as head of the National Assembly and had appointed Gnassingbe to replace him, giving the president?s son the legal obligation to take over from his father.
?The revision of the constitution is completely independent from the procedure which made Faure Gnassingbe the head of the national assembly,? Communications Minister Pitang Tchalla told state television immediately after the presidential declaration.
He said parliament was entitled to change the electoral code whenever it saw fit, and it had done so to allow ministers to be members of parliament, and thus potential assembly leaders, at the same time.
Gnassingbe was Minister for Public Works, Mines, Posts and Telecommunications when his father died and thus ineligible to head the national assembly.
Tchalla said with Natchaba out of the country, the army had rapidly appointed Gnassingbe because it feared a power vacuum.
He failed to mention that the military had closed Togo?s air space to prevent the plane carrying Natchaba home from Europe from landing in Lome.
The former head of the National Assembly was forced to land at Cotonou in neighbouring Benin and has since remained there.
On Friday, a group of around 50 lawyers decked out in their black robes gathered on the steps of the capital?s law courts to protest the way in which Gnassingbe had ridden roughshod over the country?s laws. Meanwhile, university professors took their strike against the transition of power into a second day.
"I'm still in shock at his declaration," Yawowi Agboyibo, the head of the Action Committee for Reform (CAR) opposition party, told IRIN after the speech. ?I think any thinking man is capable of seeing the light, but Gnassingbe is stuck in the dark, surrounded by hawks.?
Keeping his head down
Even Gnassingbe?s aides play up his tendency to keep a low profile.
?Calm, placid and discreet,? is the first description of the new leader in a one-page biography handed out by his office.
Until the end of this week, Gnassingbe had largely managed to avoid the diplomatic limelight as international condemnation bored down on him.
He sent his close political allies, including the foreign minister Kokou Tozoun and influential military figures, like retired general Seye Memene, to a flurry of meetings in Niger, Burkina Faso and back home in Togo.
When it became clear that Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) was standing firm with its threat to impose sanctions on Togo unless the country returned to its old constitution, Gnassingbe ventured out on his first foreign trip to Nigeria.
He met President Olusegun Obasanjo, the current head of the African Union who has been one of his most vocal critics, in the Nigerian capital Abuja. Obasanjo, a former military head of state who spent decades in the political wilderness before returning to power as an elected president, cast himself firmly in the role of the father figure.
Obasanjo reprimanded his errant and inexperienced Togolese junior and accorded him none of the usual honours reserved for visiting heads of state. Gnassingbe flew home without making a public comment.
Twenty fours later, dressed in a dark suit, his eyes flitting repeatedly off camera, he went on television to promise Togo?s five million people elections in early April, but said he would stay in charge until then.
?It?s a very careful search for space,? said Olly Owen, Africa analyst for the London-based World Markets Research Centre.
?Faure and his familial-military clique are accepting there?s going to be a transition of power in the long-term. But they are trying to stay in control and preserve as much as they can of the family business by securing a ?soft landing? and comfortable exit option.?
Stranglehold on power
In Togo, a narrow strip of land sandwiched between Ghana and Benin, former state employees talk about how they were passed over for promotion because they were not fervent supporters of the ruling Rally of the Togolese People (RPT) party, which controls all but a handful of seats in parliament.
Businessmen bemoan the fact that their enterprises have run up against obstacles because of their political persuasions.
Many people point to the military?s stranglehold on the country.
?The military are everywhere. They control the financial institutions -- the port, the tax office and the customs,? explained Jean-Pierre Fabre, the secretary-general of the main opposition party, the Union of Forces for Change (UFC).
?They have destroyed this country, it?s completely on its knees but the army wants to stay in power so they can continue to eat from the trough.?
The military hierarchy is dominated by the Kabiye, the president?s ethnic group which makes up just 13 percent of the population and this is a bone of contention with Togo?s largest tribe, the Ewe from the south.
But it is not the entire army that is reaping the benefits.
?The people with the keys to the army arsenal are those protecting the president. A rebellion in the army is not possible because those that favour democracy are not those with the weapons and the ammunition,? said Adote Akwei, head of the Togolese Human Rights League.
Togo?s political opposition and many people on the streets cast Gnassingbe as a puppet, propped up as head of state by his Kabiye ethnic kinsmen who hail from the north.
?He?s been persuaded into power by people in the army and the RPT who are terrified that if power changes camps, there will be a settling of accounts,? one local businessman told IRIN on condition of anonymity
Puppet?
But some diplomats and analysts disagree, saying it is natural for any president -- from the leader of the world?s only superpower George W. Bush on down -- to have a team of advisors who shape strategy.
?He?s no puppet, he?s simply the visible part of the iceberg, the acceptable face of the family,? said Owen of World Markets Research Centre.
Faure, 39, was born in Afagnan, in the southeast corner of Togo, about 30 km from the border with Benin.
His school days were split between the main northern town Kara and the southern capital Lome, before he jetted off to former colonial power France to study management and cement contacts.
A stint in the United States followed, during which he obtained an MBA at George Washington University. Then it was back home to Togo to carve out his political career.
He was elected a deputy in the national assembly in 2002 and by mid-2003, he was Minister for Public Works, Mines, Post and Telecommunications. That put him in charge of Togo?s lucrative phosphate mines, the country?s main source of foreign exchange earnings, and early-stage oil exploration.
Faure is not the only prominent son of Eyadema embedded in Togo?s ruling elite.
His brother Kpatcha heads the state body SAZOF, which oversees investments into and exports out of the country. Another sibling, Ernest, was in charge of the army?s parachute regiment until he fell ill. Then there is Rock, the brother who is president of the Togolese Football Federation.
Groomed for the top job
However, Faure was the only one of Eyadema?s estimated 100 children from several wives, to assume a high profile in government.
Some Togo watchers say a constitutional change in 2002, showed he was clearly being groomed as the presidential heir apparent.
Eyadema, who seized power in a military coup when he was 31, reduced the minimum age for the president to 35. This made Faure immediately eligible to take over the reins of power if something happened to Dad.
Meeting Faure, people are struck by his youth, but that fresh face look also scares many in Togo.
?He?s young and that means we could have another 40 years of this familial dictatorship, this Togolese mafia,? said one 26-year-old unemployed phone technician, who would only give his name as Frederic.
Some have compared Gnassingbe to ?Baby Doc?, Jean-Claude Duvalier, who tried to succeed his father ?Papa Doc? Francois Duvalier, as president of Haiti, with disastrous consequences.
However, there are other observers, both national and international, who lament not the man but simply the way he was propelled to power by military hardliners.
As one western diplomat put it: ?The irony is Faure is an educated reformer and the sort of guy you would want in power if he was democratically elected.? [ENDS]