Togo opposition accuses govt of 'brutal' crackdown after 2 killed in protests

A protester throws a brick as opposition parties supporters confront Togolese Security Forces during a demonstration against Togo's president on October 5, 2017 in Lome. PHOTO | MATTEO FRASCHINI KOFFI | AFP

What you need to know:

  • Four members of the security forces were injured and 28 protesters were detained, the government said.

  • The government of President Faure Gnassingbe earlier this week banned planned protests in the run-up to parliamentary elections.
  • Togo has been hit by a wave of protests since last year calling for the re-introduction of two-term limits for presidents and two-round voting at elections.

LOME,  

Togo's opposition has accused the government of deploying police and soldiers in a brutal crackdown in which two protesters were killed during a rally against upcoming elections.

Security forces fired teargas and fought running battles on Saturday with demonstrators in the capital, Lome, and several other cities across the country.

Both the government and the coalition of 14 opposition parties said there were unconfirmed reports of a third fatality.

Four members of the security forces were injured and 28 protesters were detained, the government said.

'CUSTOMARY BRUTALITY'

But the leader of the opposition alliance, Jean-Pierre Fabre, said late Saturday the authorities had put down the protests with their "customary brutality".

The government of President Faure Gnassingbe earlier this week banned 10 planned protests in the run-up to parliamentary elections scheduled for December 20.

Fabre said the ban, officially on security grounds, was a "fake pretext" as the vote was organised despite lack of progress in talks brokered by the regional bloc ECOWAS.

Togo has been hit by a wave of protests since September last year calling for the re-introduction of two-term limits for presidents and two-round voting at elections.

RESIGNATION CALLS

But they have developed into calls for the resignation of Gnassingbe, who has been in power since 2005. His father, Gnassingbe Eyadema, ruled Togo for 38 years.

The opposition has said it will boycott the parliamentary elections because it objects to the current composition of the independent national electoral commission.

A defiant Faure praised protesters' "courage, engagement and determination" and said they should still try to take to the streets again between now and December 20.

But the National Alliance for Change (ANC) leader said the opposition was baffled at the apparent indifference of the international community to calls for the vote to be delayed.

"We understand even less the silence of ECOWAS to which the ANC directly appealed... after an increase in barbaric violence against defenceless civilians," he said.