Several dead in northern Togo after imam arrested

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Tue, 17 Oct 2017 - 02:49 GMT

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Tue, 17 Oct 2017 - 02:49 GMT

Supporters of opposition parties carry a billboard to barricade a road as they confront Togolese Security Forces during a demonstration against Togo's president on October 5, 2017 in Lome.

Supporters of opposition parties carry a billboard to barricade a road as they confront Togolese Security Forces during a demonstration against Togo's president on October 5, 2017 in Lome.

17 October 2017: Three people were killed as violence broke out in Togo's second city, Sokode, after an imam close to the country's main opposition was arrested, the government said on Tuesday.

"Two soldiers on guard duty at the home of a VIP were lynched and executed and their weapons and ammunition were taken," it said in a statement.

"A young person also died and about 20 other civilians and members of the security forces were injured," it added.

Amnesty International's country representative, Aime Adi, told AFP the young person killed was an apprentice upholsterer and was shot.

The clashes came against a backdrop of anti-government protests led by Tikpi Atchadam, from the Panafrican National Party (PNP), who has a power base in the northern city.

Ouro Akpo Tchagnaou, from the National Alliance for Change (ANC) party, said: "Electricity was cut off at about 7:00 pm (2100 GMT on Monday) after evening prayers.

"Five police vehicles arrived to arrest Alpha Alassane, a very well-known imam in the city," he added. "The population felt targeted and took to the streets."

Clashes lasted throughout the night until calm was restored but the authorities have been warned of renewed protests if Alassane is not freed on Tuesday morning.

"The situation was hard to put up with last night. The security forces and youths clashed in several parts of the city, with teargas and stone-throwing," one local told AFP.

"There were burning tyres, barricades erected and buildings were looted," added ANC spokesman Eric Dupuy.

"Homes were set on fire as well as a bank and premises belonging to (telephone company) TogoCell."

Sporadic violence

Togo's security minister, Colonel Yark Damehame, told the local Radio Victoire that the arrest of Alassane, who is close to the Panafrican National Party (PNP), was justified.

"In his sermons he has been calling for violence and hatred... The last straw was last Friday when he called on his followers to kill soldiers," he said.

In Bafilo, near Sokode, young people also took to the streets and erected barricades, blocking the main road, said a member of the opposition CAP 2015 coalition, Tchatchibara Akim.

There were clashes in the Agoe area of Lome, which is a PNP stronghold. Youths who burned tyres were dispersed with teargas, according to local residents.

The suburb in the north of the capital was calm on Tuesday morning.

Imam Alassane has long been a dissenting voice in Togo but his arrest comes at a time of heightened political tension in Togo in recent months.

He has allied himself with the PNP of Atchadam, who has spearheaded protests against President Faure Gnassingbe that have mobilised hundreds of thousands across the country.

The PNP and 13 other opposition parties are calling for political change in Togo to end the 50-year rule of the Gnassingbe family.

They want a limit on the number of presidential mandates to two -- in line with practice elsewhere in west Africa -- and the introduction of a two-round voting system.

The opposition parties have vowed to defy a government ban on midweek protests by marching in the capital Lome on Wednesday and Thursday.

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