Yahoo – AFP,
Sophie BOUILLON, September 6, 2017
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| Protesters carry flags and placards while they march shouting slogans as they call for reforms during an anti-government rally in Lome on September 6, 2017 (AFP Photo/PIUS UTOMI EKPEI) |
Lome (AFP)
- Hundreds of thousands of opposition supporters protested across Togo on
Wednesday calling for constitutional reform, despite an apparent government
concession to their demands.
Amnesty
International country head Aime Adi told AFP "at least 100,000" were
in the capital, Lome, with similar demonstrations taking place in some 10 other
cities.
Opposition
party leader Jean-Pierre Fabre for his part called the demonstration
"unprecedented" and estimated that "more than one million
people" were on the streets of Lome.
Neither
figure was independently verified but AFP journalists on the ground said a tide
of people had converged on the coastal capital, dwarfing previous protests.
Many
brandished placards denouncing the regime of President Faure Gnassingbe, whose
family has been in power for the last 50 years.
"The
reforms are lies, we don't believe them. If the people's minds are made up,
nothing can stop them, not even the army," said one protester, Armand
Jarre, 26.
Gnassingbe
chaired a cabinet meeting on Tuesday evening, which saw ministers approve plans
for a bill about restrictions on terms in office and changes to the voting
system.
The
opposition has been calling for both since 2005, when Gnassingbe succeeded his
father, Gnassingbe Eyadema, who ruled for nearly 40 years.
Civil
service minister Gilbert Bawara told AFP the government had taken note of the
public's "strong expectation" and that a committee was looking into
the proposals.
He invited
opposition figures to enter into "dialogue and debate" on the issue.
But he said
calls to limit the presidential mandate to a maximum two, five-year terms would
not be implemented retroactively.
"There
is no legislative reason to do so. But we need a consensus so the reform is
accepted," he added.
A consensus
would mean the approval of four-fifths of parliament, said Bawara.
Parliament
only returns from its summer break in October and exact details of the
proposals are vague.
Previous
protests
Most of
Togo's opposition parties decided to come together Lome and some 10 provincial
cities on Wednesday, despite the government's apparent olive branch.
They are
calling for an acceleration of constitutional reforms, including the limit on
how many terms a president can serve and the introduction of a two-round voting
system.
"Unir
(Unite, the president's ruling party) calls for talks as soon as it is
cornered," said Tikpi Atchadam, the head of the Panafrican National Party.
"I
think the people have made up their mind because they're fed up," he
added, calling on Gnassingbe to "leave by the front door".
"I
don't believe in dialogue with the regime anymore," he said.
One man
taking part in the protests said on condition of anonymity that after 50 years
ruled by the same family, Togo's problems were "too deep".
Hundreds of
people were killed in 2005 during violent protests following the death of
Gnassingbe Eyadema and the succession of his 38-year-old son.
The
president was re-elected in 2010 and 2015, although the opposition rejected the
results.
Last month,
at least two people were killed in anti-Gnassingbe protests in the city of
Sokode, some 300 kilometres (185 miles) north of the capital.
On Tuesday,
he appealed for "calm and restraint", adding that the deaths were
regrettable.
Hundreds of thousands of people across Togo take to the streets to demand constitutional reformhttps://t.co/rsrWwTb0E3 pic.twitter.com/qvnouvBeTO— AFP news agency (@AFP) September 6, 2017

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