Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Togo bans protests over a canceled presidential election as tensions rise !

Togo bans protests over a canceled presidential election as tensions rise

Time:2024-05-21 17:47:38 source:Cultural Carousel news portal

LOME, Togo (AP) — Togo’s government said a planned three-day protest this week over the arrest of opposition figures and new legislation scrapping president elections was illegal, a move that heightened tensions in the West African nation that has been ruled by the same family for almost 60 years.

The interior and security ministries said the protests set to begin Thursday would seriously disturb public order. In a separate notice, the government also delayed parliamentary elections until April 29, pushing the vote back by just over a week.

A spokesman for the opposition behind the planned protest said the coalition was considering whether to move forward with the rallies anyway.

“Whenever they’re in a panic, they’re ready to use any kind of tricks against the opposition,” spokesman Eric Dupuy told The Associated Press. “It doesn’t move us.”

Related information
  • Nadal returns to Roland Garros to practice amid doubts over fitness and form
  • Fin Affleck's close friendship with JLo's child Emme Maribel Munniz, 16
  • What's behind first China
  • The hotel room on WHEELS! Self
  • Burglar hurled stolen mobile phones at police from the top of 60ft high roof during nine
  • Michigan approves 'extremely toxic' copper mine just 100ft from Lake Superior
  • Last month was officially the hottest March on RECORD with global temperatures 0.73°C above average
  • Japanese astronaut to be first non
Recommended content
  • Storms damage homes in Oklahoma and Kansas. But in Houston, most power is restored
  • The headphones that could ease tinnitus with a radical new treatment
  • TOWIE's Chloe Meadows and Sophie Kasaei put on busty displays in form
  • Woman who thought she had pinkeye was actually suffering a 'functional' STROKE
  • Shooting injures 2 at Missouri high school graduation ceremony
  • Children addicted to tech including smartphones are more at risk of psychosis, study suggests