Victoire Sidemeho Tomegah-Dogbe, the Prime Minister of Togo, has been retained by President Faure Gnassingbe, and a government will be established in the following days under a new constitution, the presidency has announced.
Tensions in the coastal West African nation have increased as a result of the new charter which was approved in March. Civil society organizations and the opposition have denounced what they see as Gnassingbe’s attempt to prolong his 19-year rule beyond what was originally anticipated.
Political parties frequently have different ethnic affinities, and Togo has universal suffrage with participation from a variety of ethnic groups in the government.
As the first female prime minister of Togo since 2020, Tomegah-Dogbe is a member of the ruling Union for the Republic party, which secured a resounding majority in the April legislative election that was repeatedly postponed because of constitutional disputes.
Years have passed during which the Gnassingbe family has faced opposition in Togo. To succeed his father, Gnassingbe Eyadema, who assumed government following a coup in 1967, the president was first elected in 2005.
The Rally of the Togolese People (Rassemblement du Peuple Togolais; RPT) has dominated the nation since 1969. It was the only political party recognized until 1991 when other parties were allowed to operate. The RPT continued to rule the nation until its dissolution in 2012.