Togo has extended a state of emergency for six months in its northern Savanes region. Officials citing the need for a “return of peace” in an area where several terrorist attacks have taken place.
The country has recorded at least five attacks since November, as the West African nation and its coastal neighbours – Benin, Ghana and Ivory Coast continue to battle growing threat from insurgents in the Sahel north of their borders.
Togo in June declared a state of emergency that was due to end in mid-September, but parliamentarians on Tuesday voted unanimously to extend it for another six months, until March 2023.
“Our peaceful populations are under attack,” said Yawa Djigbodi Tsegan, president of the national assembly.
“Our objective and the objective of the president, chief of the armed forces, is to give our security agencies all the necessary means to put an end to this threat,” she added.
The state of emergency extension was needed “for the proper conduct of military operations, maintaining order, and for a return of peace and security in this region”, said Togo Minister of Security Damehame Yark.
Togo’s Savanes region borders Burkina Faso, where terror groups are present. The deadliest incident recorded so far in Togo came in July, when gunmen attacked four villages.
Although local media estimate between 15 to 10 people were killed, the army said at the time that “several” people were murdered and wounded, without specifying the a death toll.