, the first president of Togo from 1960 to 1963 , the third and longest-serving president from 1967 until his death in 2005. The president is indirectly elected for a double term of four years, and is the commander-in-chief of the
armed forces and has the right to initiate legislation and dissolve
parliament. Executive power is exercised by the
council of ministers and its
president which is the head of government and is also a position that was formerly known as the
prime minister. The president appoints the president of the Council of Ministers. President
Gnassingbé Eyadéma, who until 1993, ruled Togo under a one-party system, died of a heart attack on 5 February 2005. Under the Togolese Constitution, the President of the Parliament,
Fambaré Ouattara Natchaba, should have become president of the country, pending a presidential election to be called within 60 days. Natchaba was out of the country, returning on an Air France plane from Paris. The Togolese army, known as Forces Armées Togolaises (FAT), or
Togolese Armed Forces, closed the nation's borders, forcing the plane to land in Benin. With an engineered power vacuum, the Parliament voted to remove the constitutional clause that would have required an election within 60 days and declared that Eyadema's son,
Faure Gnassingbé, would inherit the presidency and hold office for the rest of his father's term. The African Union described the takeover as a military
coup d'état. International pressure also came from the
United Nations. Within Togo, opposition to the takeover
culminated in riots in which between 400 and 500 people died. There were uprisings in cities and towns mainly in the southern part of the country. In the town of
Aného reports of a general civilian uprising followed by a massacre by government troops. In response, Gnassingbé agreed to hold
elections and on 25 February, Gnassingbé resigned as president, and afterward accepted the nomination to run for the office in April. On 24 April 2005, Gnassingbé was elected president of Togo, receiving over 60% of the vote according to official results. His main rival in the race had been
Emmanuel Bob-Akitani from the
Union des Forces du Changement (UFC). Electoral fraud was suspected due to a lack of independent domestic or foreign oversight. Parliament designated Deputy President
Bonfoh Abbass as interim president until the inauguration. In June, Gnassingbé named opposition leader
Edem Kodjo as the prime minister. In October 2007, after postponements, elections were held under proportional representation. This allowed the less populated north to seat as many MPs as the more populated south. The president-backed party
Rally of the Togolese People (RPT) won a majority with UFC coming second and the other parties claiming inconsequential representation. Vote rigging accusations were levelled at RPT supported by the civil and military security apparatus. With the presence of an EU observer mission, cancelled ballots and illegal voting took place, the majority of which in RPT strongholds. On 3 December 2007
Komlan Mally of RPT was appointed to prime minister succeeding Agboyibor. On 5 September 2008, Mally resigned as prime minister of Togo. Gnassingbé won re-election in the March 2010 presidential election, taking 61% of the vote against
Jean-Pierre Fabre from UFC, who had been backed by an opposition coalition called FRAC (Republican Front for Change). Electoral observers noted "procedural errors" and technical problems, and the opposition did not recognise the results, claiming irregularities had affected the outcome. Periodic
protests against Faure Gnassingbé followed the election. In May 2010, opposition leader
Gilchrist Olympio announced that he would enter into a power-sharing deal with the government, a coalition arrangement which provides UFC with eight ministerial posts. In June 2012, electoral reforms prompted protesters to take to the street in Lomé for days; protesters sought a return to the 1992 constitution that would re-establish presidential term limits. July 2012 saw the resignation of the prime minister, Gilbert Houngbo. Days later, the commerce minister, Kwesi Ahoomey-Zunu, was named to lead the new government. In the same month, the home of opposition leader Jean-Pierre Fabre was raided by security forces, and thousands of protesters again rallied publicly against the government crackdown. In April 2015, Gnassingbé was re-elected for a third term. In February 2020, Gnassingbé was again re-elected for his fourth presidential term. The opposition had accusations of fraud and irregularities. The Gnassingbé family has ruled Togo since 1967, making it Africa's longest lasting dynasty.
2024 constitutional reform In March 2024, Gnassingbé presented a new constitution. One of the constitutional changes in the new constitution has Togo go from being under a
presidential system to being under a
parliamentary system, as well as weakening the power of the president, it becoming a mostly ceremonial role; strengthening the power of parliament; and strengthening the power of the prime minister and renaming the office "President of the Council of Ministers" (). The term of the new office will be six years, renewable indefinitely, whereas the term of the president is lowered to four from the previous five, renewable once. In April 2024, the Togolese parliament voted in favour of the new constitution and the new constitution was officially adopted on 6 May 2024. The reform officially came into effect on 3 May 2025, where the first indirect election of the country was held.
Jean-Lucien Savi de Tové was uninamously elected as the new president, while Gnassingbé became the president of the Council of Ministers. Aged nearly 86, Savi de Tové is the oldest ever president in history.
Administrative divisions Togo is divided into 5 regions which are subdivided in turn into 39
prefectures. From north to south the regions are
Savanes,
Kara,
Centrale,
Plateaux and
Maritime.
Foreign relations While Togo's foreign policy is nonaligned, it has historical and cultural ties with western Europe, especially France and Germany. Togo recognises the People's Republic of China,
North Korea, and
Cuba. It re-established relations with Israel in 1987. Togo pursues an active foreign policy and participates in international organisations. It is particularly active in
West African regional affairs and in the
African Union. In 2017, Togo signed the UN
treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Togo joined the
Commonwealth of Nations, along with
Gabon, at the
2022 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in
Kigali, Rwanda. In joining the Commonwealth, Foreign Minister
Robert Dussey told
Reuters, the country sought to expand its "diplomatic, political and economic network" and to "forge closer ties with the
anglophone world." The current Chief of the
General Staff is Brigadier General Titikpina Atcha Mohamed, who took office on 19 May 2009. The air force is equipped with
Alpha jets.
Human rights Togo was labelled "Not Free" by
Freedom House from 1972 to 1998 and from 2002 to 2006, and has been categorised as "Partly Free" from 1999 to 2001 and from 2007. According to a
U.S. State Department report based on conditions in 2010, human rights problems include "security force use of excessive force, including
torture, which resulted in deaths and injuries; official impunity; harsh and life-threatening prison conditions; arbitrary arrests and detention; lengthy pretrial detention; executive influence over the judiciary; infringement of citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on
freedoms of press,
assembly, and movement; official corruption; discrimination and violence against women; child abuse, including
female genital mutilation (FGM), and sexual exploitation of children; regional and ethnic discrimination; trafficking in persons, especially women and children; societal discrimination against persons with disabilities; official and societal discrimination against homosexual persons; societal discrimination against persons with
HIV; and forced labour, including by children." Same-sex sexual activity is illegal in Togo, with a penalty of one to three years imprisonment. == Geography ==