Eyadema's son named president
2005-02-06 10:11
Togo - Togo President Gnassingbe Eyadema, whose 38-year repressive reign over his tiny, impoverished country made him Africa's longest-ruling leader, died of what aides said was a heart attack on Saturday, and the military immediately named his son as his successor.
Worldwide, only Cuba's Fidel Castro has held power longer.
Eyadema, 69, who claimed sole control in 1967 after aiding in what was sub-Saharan Africa's first postcolonial coup four years earlier, suffered a heart attack in his southeastern hometown of Piya early on Saturday, and died on the way to Europe for treatment, officials said.
Hours later, Togo's military high command said Eyadema's 39-year-old son, Faure Gnassingbe, was the West African nation's new president. The constitution calls for that power to go to the speaker of parliament, but the military said he was out of the country and it was necessary "to avoid a "total vacuum of power".
State television showed images of military leaders, including army chief of defence staff General Zakari Nandja, swearing an oath of allegiance to Gnassingbe, who was the minister of mines and communication. Family names are often reversed in Africa.
Prime Minister Koffi Sama called upon security forces to keep law and order. He also announced all land borders and air space in the nation of 5.5 million people had been closed, along with the international airport in the capital, Lome.
"The armed forces and police must help preserve peace and national security," Sama said on state radio. "All the country's political, social, religious leaders must avoid any act likely to plunge the country into anarchy and confusion."
In Washington, state department spokesperson Edgar Vazquez extended condolences to Eyadema's family but also encouraged the country to embrace a more representative democracy.
"The United States has long encouraged Togo to move toward a full and participatory democracy and it continues to believe that this must be the goal for the people of Togo," Vazquez said.
Togo's constitution calls for the speaker of parliament to succeed the president in the event of his death. By law, the parliament speaker must call national elections to choose a new president within 60 days.
Nandja, however, said the speaker of parliament, Fanbare Tchaba, was out of the country and the military had declared Eyadema's son president to ensure stability. Nandja did not say whether the move was a temporary measure and it was not known where Tchaba was.
"The armed forces of Togo finds itself faced with the evidence of a total vacuum of power in Togo. This is because the speaker of the national assembly is absent, outside the country," Nandja said. "Therefore, in order not to create a power vacuum, the armed forces of Togo have decided to declare Faure Gnassingbe the head of state."
Eyadema, a former Togolese French Foreign Legion officer who favoured sunglasses and snappy suits, had survived assassination attempts, international isolation over rights abuses, and uprisings.
Eyadema was considered one of Africa's last "Big Men" - rulers holding power through patronage, the loyalty of their ethnic and regional groups, and military force.
In his last inauguration after an internationally criticised 2003 election, witnesses said Eyadema rose from what was a reclining easy-chair set on a stage to take the oath of office.
The European Union imposed sanctions on Togo in 1993 following allegations that security forces opened fire on democracy activists, killing about 20 people. International rights organisations accuse his regime of suppressing the opposition and charge him with widespread rights abuses and most aid to the tiny country remains frozen.
Togo is dependent mostly on commercial and subsistence agriculture and more than one-third of its people live in poverty. With development and economic reform stalled, roads and other infrastructure are crumbling.
In more recent years, perhaps in an effort to rehabilitate his image, Eyadema took part in regional efforts to bring peace to Burundi, Ivory Coast and Liberia.
- SAPA