Mindanao Times

Togo election to extend ruling dynasty’s hold, say

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TOGO’S president, Faure Gnassingbe, looks set to claim a fourth term at the polls on Saturday and extend his family’s halfcentur­y domination of the West African nation.

After weathering protests in 2017 and 2018, Gnassingbe pushed through constituti­onal changes last year enabling him to run again -- and potentiall­y remain in power for another decade.

The weekly demonstrat­ions calling for Gnassingbe to go were the biggest challenge in years to the dynastic rule that saw him take over after the death of his strongman father in 2005.

But a combinatio­n of government repression and squabbling between the opposition saw the protests fizzle out.

Gnassingbe, 53, now looks set to swat aside the other contenders.

“The opposition was able to build a popular movement to worry the regime but then was not able to capitalise on it,” opposition politician Nathaniel Olympio, who is not running in the election, told AFP.

“It shot itself in the foot.”

- Jihadist threat The president’s family has been at the helm of the country of eight million since his father Gnassingbe Eyadema took control in 1967.

He ran Togo with an iron fist for 38 years before

the military men around him installed his son to take over.

The current president improved the regime’s image but it still maintains a strangleho­ld over the country and its financial resources.

The authoritie­s have banned a major civil society group and the Catholic Church from monitoring Saturday’s elections and critics insist it will not be free and fair.

Gnassingbe has made security central to his message as the nation nervously eyes the jihadist violence rocking its neighbour Burkina Faso to the north.

Togo’s Israeli-trained army and intelligen­ce service are among the most effective in the region and so far the country has not suffered any terror attacks.

The president points to the problems in Burkina Faso since Blaise Compaore’s ouster in 2014 as proof that his continued rule is vital for maintainin­g stability and stopping the jihadist spread.

“The threat is real and the pressure is very strong,” Gnassingbe told AFP as he campaigned close to the border.

He has also made a major play of a flagship program that aims to provide the entire population with power by 2030 and is pledging to create 500,000 jobs for the youth.

But after 53 years of his family’s rule the country still remains deeply impoverish­ed.

The World Bank says that around half of the population live on under $1.90 (1.76 euros) per day and the authoritie­s are widely criticised over the health system.

- ‘Don’t ask for much’ Even so, the six challenger­s lining up against Gnassingbe face a mammoth task to persuade the 3.6 million registered voters to oust Gnassingbe.

Veteran candidate Jean-Pierre Fabre came second at the last two elections but the 67-year old former human rights activist has failed to keep the opposition united.

Agbeyome Kodjo, who served as prime minister under Gnassingbe’s father, is seen as a potential dark horse after winning the backing of an influentia­l Catholic archbishop.

 ??  ?? THE ABANDONED 77-metre (250-feet) cargo ship MV Alta is pictured stuck on rocks near the village of Ballycotto­n south-east of Cork in Southern Ireland. A “ghost ship” drifting without a crew for more than a year washed ashore on Ireland’s south coast in high seas caused by Storm Dennis, the Republic’s coast guard said. AFP PHOTO
THE ABANDONED 77-metre (250-feet) cargo ship MV Alta is pictured stuck on rocks near the village of Ballycotto­n south-east of Cork in Southern Ireland. A “ghost ship” drifting without a crew for more than a year washed ashore on Ireland’s south coast in high seas caused by Storm Dennis, the Republic’s coast guard said. AFP PHOTO

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