Posted on 02/08/2005 6:20:52 PM PST by dighton
Gnassingbe Eyadema, the President of Togo, who has died aged 69, was not only Africas longest serving leader, sustaining himself in power through tyranny; he also had the dubious distinction of pioneering that continents first military coup detat, a trend that caught on swiftly and blighted the first 25 years of the post-colonial era.
Eyadema was a 31-year-old army sergeant when he first seized power in January 1967 although, as self-appointed leader of a group of rebellious former French Foreign Legionnaires, he was widely held to have played a personal role in the assassination of Togos first president, Sylvanus Olympio, four years earlier. Eyadema claimed initially that he had not sought leadership for himself but to restore democracy to his country. He was soon, however, reinforcing his despotic rule with the ruthlessness he had acquired as a burly French soldier who had fought in Indo-China and Algeria.
He was also quick to learn that dictatorship required the development of a personality cult, surrounding himself with fellow tribesmen from the heavily-populated northern region of Togo. His status acquired an almost religious intensity after he survived at least three assassination attempts and an air crash.
Despite the tyranny, Eyadema enjoyed the unquestioning patronage of France, repeatedly being welcomed by President Chirac as a close personal friend of mine and of France. The dictator, by now deeming himself to be Le Guide, was shrewd enough to ensure that he and the country he dominated remained loyal to the concept of the French sphere of influence, while France was cynical enough to ignore even defend any excesses of his regime.
Paris, as always keen to reward any potential leader who might help extend its West African ambitions, ensured that Togo appeared as a stable nation which could assist its foreign policy with a UN General Assembly vote. As a result, Ecowas (the Economic Community of West African States) was founded in partnership with Nigeria; Lome, the Togolese capital, hosted aid and trade conventions of the EU, which led to the Lome convention governing Africas relations with Europe.
Togo, a small wedge of a country between Ghana and Benin, has relatively few resources, relying heavily on the mining of phosphates backed by small cocoa, coffee and cotton crops. Even so, Eyadema, through his French military connections, could be relied upon to keep the flag of black France flying. As a result, his regime could count on some £60 million of aid from Paris each year, very little of which found its way to the increasingly impoverished Togolese people.
Gnassingbe Eyadema was born at Pya in the semi-arid north of Togo, on December 26 1935, the son of poor peasant parents of the Kabye tribe, one of the largest of the countrys 37. He was given the Christian name Etienne, only changing it to Eyadema, meaning courage in the local dialect, when he began his ascent to power.
He received only the most rudimentary education but developed into a strong and energetic youth, excelling in physical sports, particularly a local form of wrestling. The French garrison in Dahomey (now Benin) was recruiting strong young men; Eyadema and a group of friends made their way across the nearby border to volunteer.
His physical prowess and enthusiasm as a French soldier in combat earned him promotion and instilled in him a loyalty to France. He was based back in Dahomey when Togo, a former UN Trust Territory, was granted full independence in 1960. Sylvanus Olympio, scion of one of the best-known families of the southern Ewe people favoured by the colonial power for their aptitude, became the first president.
Honourably discharged after his service with the French, Eyadema returned to Togo, hoping to join his own countrys army. Olympio was suspicious of any military ambitions and flatly refused Eyademas request to sponsor a training course in France. Arrogantly sidelining the poor people of the north, Olympio had also made the mistake of making it clear he wished to distance the new country from its colonial past, which led many West African observers to believe that Paris had a hand in his assassination.
Eyadema boasted to friends that he was the man who fired the shots which killed Olympio in the early hours of January 13 1963. He later denied any complicity and threatened journalists who reported it. But he became an influential military figure under the new president, Nicolas Grunitzky, helping to form Togos army and rapidly becoming a colonel and chief-of-staff.
Grunitzkys regime was soon facing a severe political and economic crisis. Eyadema, with seeming reluctance, agreed to help the people with their desire for true democracy, and seized power in January 1967.
His early public speeches and the day-to-day administration of the countrys affairs were all dictated by Jaques Foccart, de Gaulles Machiavellian adviser on African affairs. French advisers ran the government departments and created a Togo that was, according to critics, a reborn French colony in all but name. Eyadema was left unhindered to do what he did best increase the armed forces and police loyal to him and eliminate any opposition. Political opponents were exiled or disappeared. A former vice-president and a popular army colonel died in mysterious circumstances.
When international demands forced many African states to observe democratic standards and dictators began to fall, Eyadema called a presidential election in 1998. Many died as he attempted to rig the poll, and when the voting began to go against him he put an abrupt end to the process in the interests of national security. Amnesty International reported a persistent pattern of killings, disappearances, torture and arbitrary arrests.
Jacques Chirac visited Togo in 1999, criticising Amnestys report as manipulation but quietly urging Eyadema towards democracy under threat of a withdrawal of French aid money. Eyadema duly announced that he would sacrifice himself once more by seeking re-election in new elections in 2003. He won this poll, having banned his main opponent, Gilchrist Olympio, son of the man he had murdered in his first quest for power.
He had suffered from a heart condition for several years and reportedly died from a heart attack on February 5 as he was about to board an aircraft for treatment in Paris. Under Togos constitution, power should have passed to the speaker of the national assembly, but the countrys constitution was altered overnight to allow the dictators son, Faure, to be named as his successor.
Gnassingbe Eyadema is survived by three wives and an estimated 12 children.
Sounds bad. Hope it's not something contagious.
From Senegal, to the Ivory Coast, to Togo, France has tried to exercise every inch of its residual colonial power over the developing nations of West Africa.
On the other hand, the nation of Benin is a prime example of how powerful a united people can be, when resisting the concerted tyranny of Communist despotism.
Their peaceful revolution is something that should be emulated by oppressed populations everywhere, from those living behind the "Sugar Cane Curtain" of Cuba, to those trapped behind the "Bamboo Curtain" that has shrouded Vietnam and Laos in darkness for the past three decades.
Guten tag.
Fatal, in fact, though some might say regrettably slow.
I hope that whatever he had soon afflicts "El Hefe."
Kim Jong-Il is another one who could use some "heart problems", if ya catch my drift.
-good times, G.J.P.(Jr.)
...the President of Togo, who has died aged 69, was not only Africas longest serving leader...Oh, man, I nearly fainted. Careless reading led me to believe that Bongo had died.
Long live O.C. & Stiggs! (and Bongo)

Lob-ster!
"Kim Jong-Il is another one who could use some "heart problems", if ya catch my drift."
He's got a problem already....cardiacagenesis - failure of the development of a heart (I think I made that up)
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