| Eyadema’s son
declared winner of Togolese election .. Obasanjo welcomes
result
By EMMA EMEOZOR,with Agency Report and LUCKY NWANKWERE,
Abuja
Wednesday, April 27, 2005
| 
|
Faure
Gnassingbe
PHOTO: Sun News Publishing
|
| |
| |
Faure Gnassingbe, son of the late President of Togo Gnassingbe
Eyadema, was Tuesday formally declared winner of the presidential
election held on Sunday.
This is coming 24 hours after African Union Chairman and Nigerian
President, Olusegun Obasanjo, held a parley with Gnassingbe
and opposition candidate, Emmanuel Akitani Bob in Abuja.
Declaring result of the election, the Chairman of the National
Electoral Commission, Kissem Tchangai-Walla, said Gnassingbe,
candidate of Togo Peoples Rally (RPT), won with over 60 per
cent of total votes cast. Opposition candidate, Emmanuel Akitani-Bob
came second, having garnered 38 per cent of the votes, while
Harry Olympio came a distant third.
"In view of these results... the candidate of the RPT
has been provisionally elected," the electoral chief
said.
However, she said the results did not include areas where
ballot boxes were destroyed.
The constitutional court, which would announce the final results,
would decide these issues, she said.
It would be recalled that clashes between opposition supporters
and security forces had escalated in Lome, after polls ended
Sunday. This had prompted President Obasanjo to convene the
meeting in Abuja at the instance of United Nations Secretary-General,
Kofi Annan.
On the meeting, President Obasanjo’s spokeswoman, Mrs.
Remi Oyo, said the Nigerian president did not discuss the
issue of whether the election was fair. The opposition’s
bone of contention was that the election was fixed in favour
of Gnassingbe.
"The question of the nature of the election was not discussed.
I mean that is not what was on the front burner. What is on
the front burner is that the Togolese people, the major actors
in the crisis, have agreed to chart a new course for their
country," she said.
The two rivals also agreed in the Abuja meeting to amend the
country’s constitution to satisfy fundamental human
rights and ensure popular participation in politics.
Prior to the Abuja meeting, Gnassingbe’s campaign director,
Komi Klassou, was quoted as saying: "The president said
his victory would be a victory for the Togolese people. You
can be sure that he will extend his hand to all citizens so
that together we can build a stable Togo."
On Tuesday, Lome was reported tense, but the streets were
largely deserted as people waited to see what would happen.
The election was the first in four decades. Togo tumbled into
crisis, February 5 when Eyadema died, ending a reign that
made him Africa's longest-serving leader. The army then named
Gnassingbe, as president in what many saw as a military coup.
International pressure forced Gnassingbe to step down and
promised elections amid opposition’s protests that degenerated
to bloody violence.
Like his father, Gnassingbe is a man of very few words. But
he does have the fierce loyalty of the country's well-organized
and well-equipped military. Born in 1966 to a mother who hails
from Atakpame in central Togo, he is one of Eyadema's many
sons and seen as the most levelheaded. He studied at France's
Sorbonne University and has an MBA from the George Washington
University in the United States.
According to Reuter’s news agency, he was his father's
financial adviser, running the family's economic interests,
particularly overseas. He is a relative newcomer to politics,
entering the political fray in June 2002, when he won a seat
in parliamentary elections as a candidate of the ruling Togo
People's Rally (RPT) in Blitta constituency in central Togo.
Later, he was appointed by his father as minister for telecommunications,
mines and equipment, a post he held until Eyadema's death
in February.
While his son was minister, Eyadema lowered the eligibility
age for presidential candidates from 40 to 35 years when the
ruling RPT-dominated parliament unilaterally amended the Togo
constitution in December 2002.
Meanwhile, President Olusegun Obasanjo Tuesday welcomed the
result of Togo’s presidential election, but quickly
reminded the winner and son of former president, Faure Gnassingbe
of the decisions reached at the Abuja peace meeting with the
opposition.
Mrs. Oyo, who briefed State House correspondents on the issue
in Abuja, said the president expressed the hope that the understanding
that prevailed at the Abuja meeting between Gnassingbe and
his main opponent would be sustained.
She explained that the objective of Monday’s peace meeting
which President Obasanjo had brokered between the main rival
political groups in Togo was to find a political solution
to the crisis in Togo and ensure the establishment of a government
of national unity as a way of averting serious crisis.
|