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Togo police fire teargas at opposition protesters

By AFP
Togo Togo security forces patrol the streets of Lome during clashes with protesters in 2013.  By Daniel Hayduk AFPFile
NOV 21, 2014 LISTEN
Togo security forces patrol the streets of Lome during clashes with protesters in 2013. By Daniel Hayduk (AFP/File)

Lome (AFP) - Police in Togo's capital Lome on Friday fired teargas at protesters defying a government ban on marching to the country's parliament, an AFP reporter said.

The police resorted to the gas to push back thousands of demonstrators, most of them from the main opposition, as they approached to within 400 metres (yards) of the National Assembly.

The government of President Faure Gnassingbe had previously ordered the marchers away from the parliament building and told all schools in the capital to close in case of civil unrest.

"We have come out to put pressure on the government and the powers that be to ensure that political reform is implemented," said Jean-Pierre Fabre, the head of the National Alliance for Change.

"We are going to keep up the pressure to have all these reforms before the presidential elections in 2015," Fabre, who was this month chosen to stand at the vote, told AFP.

A meeting between Fabre and Gnassingbe has been scheduled for Saturday.

The stand-off led to tensions with the protesters, some of whom brandished banners proclaiming "Two terms is enough!" and "50 years in power. That's enough!"

The protesters dispersed after the firing of teargas and some tyres were seen burning but calm returned soon after, the reporter said.

Gnassingbe has not yet announced whether he will stand for re-election but is widely expected to seek a third term of office -- the current maximum allowed by the constitution.

He came to power in 2005 after the death of his father, General Gnassingbe Eyadema, who governed Togo with an iron fist for 38 years.

Togo's opposition grouping, backed by civil society groups, has long pushing for political reform to limit a president to a maximum two five-year terms of office.

But lawmakers rejected the reforms on June 30.

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