
Togo, officially the Togolese Republic, is a country in West Africa. It is bordered by Ghana to the west, Benin to the east and Burkina Faso to the north. It is one of the least developed countries and extends south to the Gulf of Guinea, where its capital, Lomé, is located. It is a small, tropical country, spanning 57,000 square kilometres (22,000 square miles) with a population of approximately 8 million, and it has a width of less than 115 km (71 mi) between Ghana and its eastern neighbour Benin.
Togolese Republic République togolaise (French) | |
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![]() Flag ![]() Coat of arms | |
Motto: "Travail, Liberté, Patrie" (English: "Work, Liberty, Homeland") | |
Anthem: "Terre de nos aïeux" (English: "Land of our ancestors") | |
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Capital and largest city | Lomé 6°8′N 1°13′E / 6.133°N 1.217°E |
Official languages | French |
Spoken languages | List:
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Ethnic groups | African (94.4%)
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Religion (2020) |
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Demonym(s) | Togolese |
Government | Unitary parliamentary republic under an authoritarian hereditary dictatorship |
• President | Faure Gnassingbé |
• Prime Minister | Victoire Tomegah Dogbé |
Legislature | Parliament |
National Assembly | |
Independence from Germany and France | |
• German Togoland | 5 July 1884 |
• Togoland Campaign | 6–26 August 1914 |
• French Togoland partitioned | 27 December 1916 |
• Autonomy within the French Union | 24 August 1956 |
• Independence granted from France | 27 April 1960 |
Area | |
• Total | 56,785 km2 (21,925 sq mi) (123rd) |
• Water (%) | 4.2 |
Population | |
• 2024 estimate | |
• 2022 census | 8,095,498 |
• Density | 125.9/km2 (326.1/sq mi) (60th) |
GDP (PPP) | 2023 estimate |
• Total | |
• Per capita | |
GDP (nominal) | 2023 estimate |
• Total | |
• Per capita | $1,004 (170th) |
Gini (2015) | ![]() medium inequality |
HDI (2022) | low (163rd) |
Currency | West African CFA franc (XOF) |
Time zone | UTC (GMT) |
Date format | dd/mm/yyyy |
Calling code | +228 |
ISO 3166 code | TG |
Internet TLD | .tg |
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Various peoples settled the boundaries of present day Togo between the 11th and 16th centuries. Between the 16th and 18th centuries, the coastal region served primarily as a European slave trading outpost, earning Togo and the surrounding region the name "The Slave Coast". In 1884 during the scramble for Africa, Germany established a protectorate in the region called Togoland. After World War I, Togo was transferred to France with its contemporary borders. Togo gained independence from France in 1960. In 1967, Gnassingbé Eyadéma led a successful military coup d'état and became president of an anti-communist, single-party state. In 1993, Eyadéma faced multiparty elections marred by irregularities, and won the presidency three times. At the time of his death, Eyadéma was the "longest-serving leader in modern African history", having been president for 38 years. In 2005, his son Faure Gnassingbé was elected president.
Togo is a tropical, sub-Saharan nation whose economy depends mostly on agriculture. The official language is French, but other languages are spoken, particularly those of the Gbe family. 47.8% of the population adhere to Christianity, making it the largest religion in the country. Togo is a member of the United Nations, African Union, Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation Zone, Francophonie, Commonwealth of Nations, and Economic Community of West African States.
History
This section does not cite any sources.(October 2024) |
Archaeological finds indicate that tribes were able to produce pottery and process iron. The name Togo is translated from the Ewe language as "behind the river". During the period from the 11th century to the 16th century, tribes entered the region: the Ewé from the west, and the Mina and Gun from the east. Most of them settled in coastal areas. The Atlantic slave trade began in the 16th century, and for the next two hundred years the coastal region was a trading centre for Europeans in search of slaves, earning Togo and the surrounding region the name "The Slave Coast".
In 1884, a paper was signed at Togoville with King Mlapa III, whereby Germany claimed a protectorate over a stretch of territory along the coast and gradually extended its control inland. Its borders were defined after the capture of hinterland by German forces and signing agreements with France and Britain. In 1905, this became the German colony of Togoland. The local population was forced to work, cultivate cotton, coffee, and cocoa and pay taxes. A railway and the port of Lomé were built for export of agricultural products. The Germans introduced techniques of cultivation of cocoa, coffee and cotton and developed the infrastructure.
During the First World War, Togoland was invaded by Britain and France, proclaiming the Anglo-French condominium. The Togoland Campaign involved the successful French and British invasion of the German colony of Togoland during the West African Campaign of the First World War. Following the Allied invasion of the colony in August 1914, German forces were defeated, forcing the colony's surrender on 26 August 1914. On 7 December 1916, the condominium collapsed and Togoland was subsequently partitioned into British and French zones, creating the colonies of British Togoland and French Togoland. On 20 July 1922, Great Britain received the League of Nations mandate to govern the western part of Togo and France to govern the eastern part. In 1945, the country received the right to send three representatives to the French parliament.
After World War II, these mandates became UN Trust Territories. The residents of British Togoland voted to join the Gold Coast as part of the independent nation of Ghana in 1957. French Togoland became an autonomous republic within the French Union in 1959, while France retained the right to control defence, foreign relations, and finances.
Independence
The Togolese Republic was proclaimed on 27 April 1960. In the first presidential elections in 1961, Sylvanus Olympio became the first president, gaining 100% of the vote in elections boycotted by the opposition. On 9 April 1961, the Constitution of the Togolese Republic was adopted, according to which the supreme legislative body was the National Assembly of Togo. In December 1961, leaders of opposition parties were arrested because they were accused of the preparation of an anti-government conspiracy. A decree was issued on the dissolution of the opposition parties. Olympio tried to reduce dependence on France by establishing cooperation with the United States, United Kingdom, and West Germany. He rejected the efforts of French soldiers who were demobilized after the Algerian War and tried to get a position in the Togolese army. These factors eventually led to a military coup on 13 January 1963 during which he was assassinated by a group of soldiers under the direction of Sergeant Gnassingbé Eyadéma. A state of emergency was declared in Togo. The military handed over power to an interim government led by Nicolas Grunitzky. In May 1963, Grunitzky was elected President of the Republic. The new leadership pursued a policy of developing relations with France. His main aim was to dampen the divisions between north and south, promulgate a new constitution, and introduce a multiparty system.
On 13 January 1967, Eyadéma Gnassingbé overthrew Grunitzky in a bloodless coup and assumed the presidency. He created the Rally of the Togolese People Party, banned activities of other political parties and introduced a 1-party system in November 1969. He was reelected in 1979 and 1986. In 1983, the privatization program launched and in 1991 other political parties were allowed. In 1993, the European Union froze the partnership, describing Eyadema's re-election in 1993, 1998 and 2003, as a seizure of power. In April 2004, in Brussels, talks were held between the EU and Togo on the resumption of cooperation.
Eyadéma Gnassingbé died on Saturday, 5 February 2005. The military's installation of his son, Faure Gnassingbé, as president provoked international condemnation, except from France. Some "democratically elected" African leaders such as Abdoulaye Wade of Senegal and Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria supported the move, thereby creating a rift within the African Union. Gnassingbé left power and held elections, which he won two months later. The opposition declared that the election results were fraudulent. The events of 2005 led to questions regarding the government's commitment to democracy that had been made in an attempt to normalize relations with the EU which cut off aid in 1993 due to questions about Togo's human rights situation. Up to 400 people were killed in the violence surrounding the presidential elections, according to the UN. Around 40,000 Togolese fled to neighbouring countries. Gnassingbé was reelected in 2010 and 2015.
Togo became the first African nation to win an Olympic medal in canoeing at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing when Benjamin Boukpeti won bronze in the K-1 slalom.
In 2017, anti-government protests erupted. UN condemned the resulting crackdown by security forces, and Gambia's foreign minister, Ousainou Darboe, had to issue a correction after saying that Gnassingbé should resign.
In the February 2020 presidential elections, Faure Gnassingbé won his fourth presidential term in office as the president of Togo. According to the official result, he won with a margin of around 72% of the vote share. This enabled him to defeat his closest challenger, the former prime minister Agbeyome Kodjo who had 18%. On 4 May 2020, Bitala Madjoulba, the commander of a Togolese military battalion, was found dead in his office. The day of Madjoulba's death came after the re-elected Faure Gnassingbé was sworn in for his fourth term. An investigation was opened for this case, resulting in Major General Kadangha Abalo Felix being prosecuted and tried for involvement in Madjoulba's assassination and 'conspiracy against the internal security of the state.'
Joining the Commonwealth
Togo joined the Commonwealth in June 2022. Prior to its admission at the 2022 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Foreign Minister Robert Dussey said that he expected Commonwealth membership to provide new export markets, funding for development projects and opportunities for Togolese citizens to learn English and access new educational and cultural resources.
Government
The president is elected by universal and direct suffrage for five years, and is the commander of the armed forces and has the right to initiate legislation and dissolve parliament. Executive power is exercised by the president and the government. The head of government is the Prime Minister who is appointed by the president.
President Gnassingbé Eyadéma, who ruled Togo under a one-party system, died of a heart attack on 5 February 2005. Under the Togolese Constitution, the President of the Parliament, Fambaré Ouattara Natchaba, should have become president of the country, pending a presidential election to be called within 60 days. Natchaba was out of the country, returning on an Air France plane from Paris. The Togolese army, known as Forces Armées Togolaises (FAT), or Togolese Armed Forces, closed the nation's borders, forcing the plane to land in Benin. With an engineered power vacuum, the Parliament voted to remove the constitutional clause that would have required an election within 60 days and declared that Eyadema's son, Faure Gnassingbé, would inherit the presidency and hold office for the rest of his father's term. Faure was sworn in on 7 February 2005, with international criticism of the succession. The African Union described the takeover as a military coup d'état. International pressure also came from the United Nations. Within Togo, opposition to the takeover culminated in riots in which between 400 and 500 people died. There were uprisings in cities and towns mainly in the southern part of the country. In the town of Aného reports of a general civilian uprising followed by a massacre by government troops. In response, Faure Gnassingbé agreed to hold elections and on 25 February, Gnassingbé resigned as president, and afterward accepted the nomination to run for the office in April.
On 24 April 2005, Gnassingbé was elected president of Togo, receiving over 60% of the vote according to official results. His main rival in the race had been Emmanuel Bob-Akitani from the Union des Forces du Changement (UFC). Electoral fraud was suspected due to a lack of independent domestic or foreign oversight. Parliament designated Deputy President, Bonfoh Abbass, as interim president until the inauguration. On 3 May 2005, Faure Gnassingbé was sworn in as the new president and the European Union suspended aid to Togo in support of the opposition claims, unlike the African Union and the United States which declared the vote "reasonably fair". The Nigerian president and Chair of AU, Olusẹgun Ọbasanjọ, sought to negotiate between the incumbent government and the opposition to establish a coalition government, and rejected an AU Commission appointment of former Zambian president, Kenneth Kaunda, as special AU envoy to Togo. In June, President Gnassingbé named opposition leader Edem Kodjo as the prime minister.
In October 2007, after postponements, elections were held under proportional representation. This allowed the less populated north to seat as many MPs as the more populated south. The president-backed party Rally of the Togolese People (RPT) won a majority with UFC coming second and the other parties claiming inconsequential representation. Vote rigging accusations were levelled at RPT supported by the civil and military security apparatus. With the presence of an EU observer mission, cancelled ballots and illegal voting took place, the majority of which in RPT strongholds. On 3 December 2007 Komlan Mally of RPT was appointed to prime minister succeeding Agboyibor. On 5 September 2008, Mally resigned as prime minister of Togo.
Faure Gnassingbé won re-election in the March 2010 presidential election, taking 61% of the vote against Jean-Pierre Fabre from UFC, who had been backed by an opposition coalition called FRAC (Republican Front for Change). Electoral observers noted "procedural errors" and technical problems, and the opposition did not recognize the results, claiming irregularities had affected the outcome. Periodic protests against Faure Gnassingbé followed the election. In May 2010, opposition leader Gilchrist Olympio announced that he would enter into a power-sharing deal with the government, a coalition arrangement which provides UFC with eight ministerial posts. In June 2012, electoral reforms prompted protesters to take to the street in Lomé for days; protesters sought a return to the 1992 constitution that would re-establish presidential term limits. July 2012 saw the resignation of the prime minister, Gilbert Houngbo. Days later, the commerce minister, Kwesi Ahoomey-Zunu, was named to lead the new government. In the same month, the home of opposition leader Jean-Pierre Fabre was raided by security forces, and thousands of protesters again rallied publicly against the government crackdown.
In April 2015, President Faure Gnassingbé was re-elected for a third term. In February 2020, Faure Gnassingbé was again re-elected for his fourth presidential term. The opposition had accusations of fraud and irregularities. The Gnassingbé family has ruled Togo since 1967, meaning it is Africa's longest lasting dynasty.
2024 Constitutional Reform
In March 2024, President Faure Gnassingbé presented a new constitution. One of the constitutional changes in the new constitution has Togo go from being under a presidential system to being under a parliamentary one, as well as weakening the power of the president, it becoming a mostly ceremonial role, strengthening the power of parliament, and strengthening the power of prime minister and renaming the office "President of the Council of Ministers" (French: Président du Conseil des Ministres). The term of the new office will be six years, renewable indefinitely, whereas the term of the president is lowered to four from the previous five, renewable once. In April 2024, the Togolese parliament voted in favour of the new constitution and the new constitution was officially adopted on 6 May 2024.
Administrative divisions
Togo is divided into 5 regions which are subdivided in turn into 39 prefectures. From north to south the regions are Savanes, Kara, Centrale, Plateaux and Maritime.
Foreign relations
While Togo's foreign policy is nonaligned, it has historical and cultural ties with western Europe, especially France and Germany. Togo recognizes the People's Republic of China, North Korea, and Cuba. It re-established relations with Israel in 1987. Togo pursues an active foreign policy and participates in international organizations. It is particularly active in West African regional affairs and in the African Union.
In 2017, Togo signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Togo joined the Commonwealth of Nations, along with Gabon, at the 2022 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Kigali, Rwanda. In joining the Commonwealth, Foreign Minister Robert Dussey told Reuters, the country sought to expand its "diplomatic, political and economic network" and to "forge closer ties with the anglophone world."
Military
FAT (Forces armées togolaises, "Togolese armed forces"), consists of the army, navy, air force, and gendarmerie. Total military expenditures during the fiscal year of 2005 totalled 1.6% of the country's GDP. Military bases exist in Lomé, Temedja, Kara, Niamtougou, and Dapaong. The current Chief of the General Staff is Brigadier General Titikpina Atcha Mohamed, who took office on 19 May 2009. The air force is equipped with Alpha jets.
Human rights
Togo was labelled "Not Free" by Freedom House from 1972 to 1998 and from 2002 to 2006, and has been categorized as "Partly Free" from 1999 to 2001 and from 2007. According to a U.S. State Department report based on conditions in 2010, human rights problems include "security force use of excessive force, including torture, which resulted in deaths and injuries; official impunity; harsh and life-threatening prison conditions; arbitrary arrests and detention; lengthy pretrial detention; executive influence over the judiciary; infringement of citizens' privacy rights; restrictions on freedoms of press, assembly, and movement; official corruption; discrimination and violence against women; child abuse, including female genital mutilation (FGM), and sexual exploitation of children; regional and ethnic discrimination; trafficking in persons, especially women and children; societal discrimination against persons with disabilities; official and societal discrimination against homosexual persons; societal discrimination against persons with HIV; and forced labour, including by children." Same-sex sexual activity is illegal in Togo, with a penalty of one to three years imprisonment.
Geography
It has an area equal to 56,785 km2 (21,925 sq mi). It borders the Bight of Benin in the south; Ghana lies to the west; Benin to the east; and to the north, it is bound by Burkina Faso. North of the equator, it lies mostly between latitudes 6° and 11°N, and longitudes 0° and 2°E.
The coast of Togo in the Gulf of Guinea is 56 km (35 miles) long and consists of lagoons with sandy beaches. In the north, the land is characterized by a rolling savanna in contrast to the centre of the country, which is characterized by hills. The south of Togo is characterized by a savanna and woodland plateau which reaches a coastal plain with lagoons and marshes. The highest mountain of the country is the Mont Agou at 986 metres (3235') above sea level. The longest river is the Mono River with a length of 400 km (250 miles). It runs from north to south.
The climate is "generally tropical" with average temperatures ranging from 23 °C (73 °F) on the coast to about 30 °C (86 °F) in the northernmost regions, with a drier climate and characteristics of a tropical savanna.
Togo contains three terrestrial ecoregions: Eastern Guinean forests, Guinean forest-savanna mosaic, and West Sudanian savanna. The coast of Togo is characterized by marshes and mangroves. The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5.88/10, ranking it 92nd globally out of 172 countries.
At least five parks and reserves have been established: Abdoulaye Faunal Reserve, Fazao Malfakassa National Park, Fosse aux Lions National Park, Koutammakou, and Kéran National Park.
Wildlife
Economy
The country possesses phosphate deposits and an export sector based on agricultural products such as coffee, cocoa bean, and peanuts (groundnuts), which together generate roughly 30% of export earnings. Cotton is a cash crop. The fertile land occupies 11.3% of the country, most of which is developed. Some crops are cassava, jasmine rice, maize and millet. Some other sectors are brewery and the textile industry. Low market prices for Togo's major export commodities coupled with the volatile political situation of the 1990s and 2000s had a negative effect on the economy.
It is listed in the least developed country group. It serves as a regional commercial and trade centre. The government's decade-long efforts supported by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to carry out economic reforms, to encourage investments, and to create the balance between income and consumption has stalled. Political unrest, including private and public sector strikes throughout 1992 and 1993, jeopardized the reform program, shrank the tax base, and disrupted economic activities in the country.[citation needed] Togo was ranked 117th in the Global Innovation Index in 2024.
It imports machinery, equipment, petroleum products, and food. Its main import partners are France (21.1%), the Netherlands (12.1%), Côte d'Ivoire (5.9%), Germany (4.6%), Italy (4.4%), South Africa (4.3%) and China (4.1%). The main exports are cocoa, coffee, re-export of goods, phosphates and cotton. "Major export partners" are Burkina Faso (16.6%), China (15.4%), the Netherlands (13%), Benin (9.6%) and Mali (7.4%).
In terms of structural reforms, it has made progress in the liberalization of the economy, namely in the fields of trade and port activities. The privatization program of the cotton sector, telecommunications and water supply has stalled.
On 12 January 1994, the devaluation of the currency by 50% provided an impetus to renewed structural adjustment; these efforts were facilitated by the end of strife in 1994 and a return to overt political calm. Progress depends on increased openness in government financial operations (to accommodate increased social service outlays) and possible downsizing of the armed forces, on which the regime has depended to stay in place. Lack of aid and depressed cocoa prices generated a 1% fall in GDP in 1998, with growth resuming in 1999. Togo is a member of the Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa (OHADA).
Agriculture is the "backbone" of the economy. A shortage of funds for the purchase of irrigation equipment and fertilizers has reduced agricultural output. Agriculture generated 28.2% of GDP in 2012 and employed 49% of the working population in 2010. The country is essentially self-sufficient in food production. Livestock production is dominated by cattle breeding.
Mining generated about 33.9% of GDP in 2012 and employed 12% of the population in 2010. Togo's gold production in 2015 is 16 metric tons. Togo has the fourth-largest phosphate deposits in the world. Their production is 2.1 million tons per year. There are reserves of limestone, marble and salt. Industry provides 20.4% of Togo's national income, as it consists of light industries and builders. Some reserves of limestone allows Togo to produce cement.
Transport
Road
This section does not cite any sources.(October 2024) |
Togo has a road network of 7,520 km (4,670 mi) as of 2000, with no updated data as of 2023. It has only two major highways, Highway N1 and N2, connecting the capital, Lomé with the city of Dapaong, where it gets diverged northwards to Burkina Faso and from there north-west to Mali, and north-east to Niger. N1 is the longest highway of Togo, at a length of 613 km (381 mi). N2 connects Lomé with Aneho. The extension of N2 is Highway RNIE1, or the Trans–West African Coastal Highway, from Aneho to Cotonou in Benin. Other roads and highways are local and regional roads in the rest of the country, also passing through borders with the neighbouring countries. The Trans–West African Coastal Highway crosses Togo, connecting it to Benin and Nigeria to the east, and Ghana and Ivory Coast to the west. Once the construction in Liberia and Sierra Leone part gets completed, the highway will continue west to seven other Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) nations.
Railways
Togo has a railway network of 568 km (353 mi) as of 2008, with no further updates in the network as of 2023. It follows a track gauge of 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+3⁄8 in) (narrow gauge) Trains are operated by Société Nationale des Chemins de Fer Togolais (SNCT), which was established as a result of the restructuring and renaming of Réseau des Chemins de Fer du Togo from 1997 to 1998. Between Hahotoé and the port of Kpémé, the Compagnie Togolaise des Mines du Bénin (CTMB) operated phosphate trains.
The following are the railway networks present in the country:
- Lomé–Aného railway
- Lomé–Blitta railway
- Lomé–Kpalimé railway
- Hahotoé–Kpémé railway (operated by CTMB)
Air
Togo has a total of eight airports, as of 2012, out of which two are international airports and six are domestic airports. The only major airport of the country is Lomé–Tokoin International Airport serving the capital, Lomé, and another Niamtougou International Airport in Niamtougou, serving the country's northern part.
Water
Togo, in terms of water transport, is only 50 km (31 mi) navigable, mostly seasonally on the Mono River, depending on rainfall, as of 2011. Togo has only one large container port for carrying trade operations in and out of the country, the Port of Lomé, in the capital.
Demographics
Population | |||
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Year | Million | ||
1950 | 1.4 | ||
2000 | 5.0 | ||
2021 | 8.6 |
The November 2010 census gave Togo a population of 6,191,155, more than double the total counted in the last census; in 2022 the Togo population was 8,680,832. That census, taken in 1981, showed the nation had a population of 2,719,567. The capital, Lomé, grew from 375,499 in 1981 to 837,437 in 2010. When the urban population of surrounding Golfe prefecture is added, the Lomé Agglomeration contained 1,477,660 residents in 2010.
Other cities in Togo according to the new census were Sokodé (95,070), Kara (94,878), Kpalimé (75,084), Atakpamé (69,261), Dapaong (58,071) and Tsévié (54,474). With an estimated population of 8,644,829 (as of 2021[update]), Togo is the 107th largest country by population. Most of the population (65%) live in rural villages dedicated to agriculture or pastures. The population of Togo shows a stronger growth: from 1961 (the year after independence) to 2003 it quintupled.
Largest cities or towns in Togo According to the 2010 Census | |||||||||
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Rank | Name | Region | Pop. | ||||||
Lomé Sokodé | 1 | Lomé | Maritime | 1,477,658 | Kara Kpalimé | ||||
2 | Sokodé | Centrale | 117,811 | ||||||
3 | Kara | Kara | 94,878 | ||||||
4 | Kpalimé | Plateaux | 75,084 | ||||||
5 | Atakpamé | Plateaux | 69,261 | ||||||
6 | Dapaong | Savanes | 58,071 | ||||||
7 | Tsévié | Maritime | 54,474 | ||||||
8 | Anié | Plateaux | 37,398 | ||||||
9 | Notsé | Plateaux | 35,039 | ||||||
10 | Cinkassé | Savanes | 26,926 |
Ethnic groups
In Togo, there are about 40 different ethnic groups, the most numerous of which are the Ewe in the south who make up 32% of the population. Along the southern coastline, they account for 21% of the population. Also found are Kotokoli or Tem and Tchamba in the centre and the Kabye people in the north (22%). The
are 14% of the population. Sometimes the Ewes and Ouatchis are considered the same, while the French who studied both groups considered them different people. Other ethnic groups include the Mina, Mossi, the Moba and Bassar, the Tchokossi of Mango (about 8%).Religion
- Christianity 47.84 (47.4%)
- Traditional faiths 33.43 (33.1%)
- Islam 18.36 (18.2%)
- No religion 0.23 (0.23%)
- Other 1.14 (1.13%)
- 0 (0.00%)
- 0 (0.00%)
According to a 2012 US government religious freedoms report, in 2004 the University of Lomé estimated that 33% of the population were traditional animists, 28% were Roman Catholic, 20% Sunni Muslim, 9% Protestant and another 5% belonged to other Christian denominations. The remaining 5% were reported to include persons not affiliated with any religious group. The report noted that "many" Christians and Muslims continue to perform indigenous religious practices.
In 2023, The World Factbook stated that 42.3% of the population was Christian and 14% Muslim, with 36.9% being followers of indigenous beliefs, less than one percent being Hindus, Jews, and followers of other religions, and 6.2% being unaffiliated.
Christianity began to spread from the middle of the 15th century, after the arrival of Portuguese Catholic missionaries. Germans introduced Protestantism in the second half of the 19th century when a hundred missionaries of the Bremen Missionary Society were sent to the coastal areas of Togo and Ghana. Togo's Protestants were known as "Brema", a corruption of the word "Bremen". After World War I, German missionaries had to leave, which gave birth to the early autonomy of the .
In 2022, Freedom House rated Togo's religious freedom as 3 out of 4, noting that religious freedom is constitutionally protected and generally respected in practice. Islam, Catholicism and Protestantism are recognised by the state; other groups must register as religious associations to receive similar benefits. The registration process has been subject to long delays with almost 900 applications pending at the beginning of 2021.
Languages
According to Ethnologue, 39 distinct languages are spoken in the country, some of them by communities that number fewer than 100,000 members. Of the 39 languages, the sole official language is French. Two spoken indigenous languages were designated politically as national languages in 1975: Ewé (Ewe: Èʋegbe; French: Evé) and Kabiyé.
Though not native to most groups, French is used in formal education, legislature, all forms of media, administration and commerce. Ewe is a language of wider communication in the south. Tem functions to a limited extent as a trade language in some northern towns. Officially, Ewe and Kabiye are "national languages", which in the Togolese context means languages that are promoted in formal education and used in the media. Others are Gen, Aja, Moba, Ntcham, and Ife. In joining the Commonwealth, the Togolese government has anticipated opportunities for Togolese citizens to learn English.
Health
The Human Rights Measurement Initiative finds that Togo is fulfilling 73.1% of what it should be fulfilling for the right to health based on its level of income. When looking at the right to health with respect to children, Togo achieves 93.8% of what is expected based on its current income. In regards to the right to health amongst the adult population, the country achieves 88.2% of what is expected based on the nation's level of income. It falls into the "very bad" category when evaluating the right to reproductive health because the nation is fulfilling 37.3% of what the nation is expected to achieve based on the resources (income) it has available.
Health expenditure in Togo was 5.2% of GDP in 2014, which ranks the country in 45th place in the world. The infant mortality rate is approximately 43.7 deaths per 1,000 children in 2016. Male life expectancy at birth was at 62.3 in 2016, whereas it was at 67.7 years for females. There were 5 physicians per 100,000 people in 2008 According to a 2013 UNICEF report, 4% of women in Togo have undergone female genital mutilation.
As of 2015[update], the maternal mortality rate per 100,000 births for Togo is 368, compared with 350 in 2010 and 539.7 in 1990. The under 5 mortality rate per 1,000 births is 100, and the neonatal mortality as a percentage of under 5's mortality is 32. In Togo the number of midwives per 1,000 live births is 2 and the lifetime risk of death for pregnant women is 1 in 67.
In 2016, Togo had 4100 (2400-6100) new HIV infections and 5100 (3100-7700) AIDS-related deaths. There were 100,000 (73,000-130,000) people living with HIV in 2016, among whom 51% (37-67%) were accessing antiretroviral therapy. Among pregnant women living with HIV, 86% (59% - >95%) were accessing treatment or prophylaxis to prevent transmission of HIV to their children. An estimated <1000 (<500-1400) children were newly infected with HIV due to mother-to-child transmission. Among people living with HIV, approximately 42% (30-55%) had suppressed viral loads.
AFD is working to enhance living conditions in Lomé, the coastal city with a population of 1.4 million, by modernizing solid waste management services. The project involves enhancing garbage collection through the construction of a new landfill that meets international standards.
In 2024, a Universal Health Insurance program was launched, covering 800,000 people within six months and implemented through the National Social Security Fund and the National Health Insurance Institute.
Education
Education in Togo is compulsory for six years. In 1996, the gross primary enrollment rate was 119.6%, and the net primary enrollment rate was 81.3%. In 2011, the net enrollment rate was 94%. The education system has "suffered from teacher shortages, lower educational quality in rural areas, and high repetition and dropout rates".
Culture
The culture reflects the influences of ethnic groups, the largest of which are the Ewe, , Tem, Tchamba and Kabre. Some people follow native animistic practices and beliefs.
Ewe statuary is characterized by its statuettes which illustrate the worship of the ibeji. Sculptures and hunting trophies were used rather than the "more ubiquitous" African masks. The wood-carvers of Kloto has their "chains of marriage": Two characters are connected by rings whittled from one piece of wood.
The dyed fabric batiks of the artisanal centre of Kloto represent stylized and coloured scenes of ancient everyday life. There are loincloths used in the ceremonies of the weavers of Assahoun. Works of the painter Sokey Edorh are inspired by the "immense arid extents, swept by the dry wind", and where the soil keeps the prints of the men and the animals. The plastics technician Paul Ahyi practiced the "zota", a kind of pyroengraving, and his monumental achievements decorate Lomé.
Basketball is Togo's "second most practiced sport". Togo featured a national team in beach volleyball that competed at the 2018–2020 CAVB Beach Volleyball Continental Cup in the men's section.
Mass media in Togo includes radio, television, and online and print formats. The
news agency began in 1975. The Union des Journalistes Independants du Togo press association is headquartered in Lomé.Togolese Television is the state-owned service.See also
- Outline of Togo
- Horses in Togo
Notes
- /ˈtoʊɡoʊ/ TOH-goh; French: [toɡo]
- French: République togolaise
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Further reading
- Bullock, A L C, Germany's Colonial Demands (Oxford University Press, 1939).
- Gründer, Horst, Geschichte der deutschen Kolonien, 3. Aufl. (Paderborn, 1995).
- Mwakikagile, Godfrey, Military Coups in West Africa Since The Sixties (Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2001).
- Packer, George, The Village of Waiting (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1988).
- Piot, Charles, Nostalgia for the Future: West Africa After the Cold War (University of Chicago Press, 2010).
- Schnee, Dr. Heinrich, German Colonization, Past and Future – the Truth about the German Colonies (George Allen & Unwin, 1926).
- Sebald, Peter, Togo 1884 bis 1914. Eine Geschichte der deutschen "Musterkolonie" auf der Grundlage amtlicher Quellen (Berlin, 1987).
- Seely, Jennifer, The Legacies of Transition Governments in Africa: The Cases of Benin and Togo (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).
- Zurstrassen, Bettina, "Ein Stück deutscher Erde schaffen". Koloniale Beamte in Togo 1884–1914 (Frankfurt/M., Campus, 2008) (Campus Forschung, 931).
External links
- Official website, Republic of Togo (in French)
- National Assembly of Togo official site
- Togo profile from ECOWAS
- Country Profile from the BBC News
Wikimedia Atlas of Togo
Geographic data related to Togo at OpenStreetMap
- News headline links from Al Jazeera.
- Togo, Democracy Now!
- Country Profile from New Internationalist
- Togo from Encyclopædia Britannica
Togo officially the Togolese Republic is a country in West Africa It is bordered by Ghana to the west Benin to the east and Burkina Faso to the north It is one of the least developed countries and extends south to the Gulf of Guinea where its capital Lome is located It is a small tropical country spanning 57 000 square kilometres 22 000 square miles with a population of approximately 8 million and it has a width of less than 115 km 71 mi between Ghana and its eastern neighbour Benin Togolese RepublicRepublique togolaise French Flag Coat of armsMotto Travail Liberte Patrie English Work Liberty Homeland Anthem Terre de nos aieux English Land of our ancestors source source track track track Show globeShow map of AfricaCapitaland largest cityLome 6 8 N 1 13 E 6 133 N 1 217 E 6 133 1 217Official languagesFrenchSpoken languagesList FrenchEweGbeGurKwaKabiyeTalensiWasaAgunaAjaNgangamNtchamTammariTemIfeYorubaEthnic groupsAfrican 94 4 Aja Ewe and Mina 42 4 Kabye and Tem 25 9 Akan and Gurma 17 1 Kposo and Akebu 4 1 Ana Ife 3 2 Other West African groups 1 7 non African 5 6 Religion 2020 47 8 Christianity33 0 traditional faiths18 4 Islam0 5 Bahaʼi faith0 3 others noneDemonym s TogoleseGovernmentUnitary parliamentary republic under an authoritarian hereditary dictatorship PresidentFaure Gnassingbe Prime MinisterVictoire Tomegah DogbeLegislatureParliament Upper house Lower houseNational AssemblyIndependence from Germany and France German Togoland5 July 1884 Togoland Campaign6 26 August 1914 French Togoland partitioned27 December 1916 Autonomy within the French Union24 August 1956 Independence granted from France27 April 1960Area Total56 785 km2 21 925 sq mi 123rd Water 4 2Population 2024 estimate9 583 381 101st 2022 census8 095 498 Density125 9 km2 326 1 sq mi 60th GDP PPP 2023 estimate Total 25 103 billion 151st Per capita 2 767 175th GDP nominal 2023 estimate Total 9 621 billion 157th Per capita 1 004 170th Gini 2015 43 1 medium inequalityHDI 2022 0 547 low 163rd CurrencyWest African CFA franc XOF Time zoneUTC GMT Date formatdd mm yyyyCalling code 228ISO 3166 codeTGInternet TLD tgSuch as Ewe and Aja Largest are the Ewe Mina Kotokoli Tem and Kabye Mostly European Indian amp Syrian Lebanese Estimates for this country explicitly take into account the effects of excess mortality due to AIDS this can result in lower life expectancy higher infant mortality and death rates lower population and growth rates and changes in the distribution of population by age and sex than would otherwise be expected Rankings based on 2017 figures CIA World Factbook Togo Various peoples settled the boundaries of present day Togo between the 11th and 16th centuries Between the 16th and 18th centuries the coastal region served primarily as a European slave trading outpost earning Togo and the surrounding region the name The Slave Coast In 1884 during the scramble for Africa Germany established a protectorate in the region called Togoland After World War I Togo was transferred to France with its contemporary borders Togo gained independence from France in 1960 In 1967 Gnassingbe Eyadema led a successful military coup d etat and became president of an anti communist single party state In 1993 Eyadema faced multiparty elections marred by irregularities and won the presidency three times At the time of his death Eyadema was the longest serving leader in modern African history having been president for 38 years In 2005 his son Faure Gnassingbe was elected president Togo is a tropical sub Saharan nation whose economy depends mostly on agriculture The official language is French but other languages are spoken particularly those of the Gbe family 47 8 of the population adhere to Christianity making it the largest religion in the country Togo is a member of the United Nations African Union Organisation of Islamic Cooperation South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation Zone Francophonie Commonwealth of Nations and Economic Community of West African States HistoryThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Archaeological finds indicate that tribes were able to produce pottery and process iron The name Togo is translated from the Ewe language as behind the river During the period from the 11th century to the 16th century tribes entered the region the Ewe from the west and the Mina and Gun from the east Most of them settled in coastal areas The Atlantic slave trade began in the 16th century and for the next two hundred years the coastal region was a trading centre for Europeans in search of slaves earning Togo and the surrounding region the name The Slave Coast Togoland R Hellgrewe 1908 In 1884 a paper was signed at Togoville with King Mlapa III whereby Germany claimed a protectorate over a stretch of territory along the coast and gradually extended its control inland Its borders were defined after the capture of hinterland by German forces and signing agreements with France and Britain In 1905 this became the German colony of Togoland The local population was forced to work cultivate cotton coffee and cocoa and pay taxes A railway and the port of Lome were built for export of agricultural products The Germans introduced techniques of cultivation of cocoa coffee and cotton and developed the infrastructure During the First World War Togoland was invaded by Britain and France proclaiming the Anglo French condominium The Togoland Campaign involved the successful French and British invasion of the German colony of Togoland during the West African Campaign of the First World War Following the Allied invasion of the colony in August 1914 German forces were defeated forcing the colony s surrender on 26 August 1914 On 7 December 1916 the condominium collapsed and Togoland was subsequently partitioned into British and French zones creating the colonies of British Togoland and French Togoland On 20 July 1922 Great Britain received the League of Nations mandate to govern the western part of Togo and France to govern the eastern part In 1945 the country received the right to send three representatives to the French parliament After World War II these mandates became UN Trust Territories The residents of British Togoland voted to join the Gold Coast as part of the independent nation of Ghana in 1957 French Togoland became an autonomous republic within the French Union in 1959 while France retained the right to control defence foreign relations and finances Independence The Togolese Republic was proclaimed on 27 April 1960 In the first presidential elections in 1961 Sylvanus Olympio became the first president gaining 100 of the vote in elections boycotted by the opposition On 9 April 1961 the Constitution of the Togolese Republic was adopted according to which the supreme legislative body was the National Assembly of Togo In December 1961 leaders of opposition parties were arrested because they were accused of the preparation of an anti government conspiracy A decree was issued on the dissolution of the opposition parties Olympio tried to reduce dependence on France by establishing cooperation with the United States United Kingdom and West Germany He rejected the efforts of French soldiers who were demobilized after the Algerian War and tried to get a position in the Togolese army These factors eventually led to a military coup on 13 January 1963 during which he was assassinated by a group of soldiers under the direction of Sergeant Gnassingbe Eyadema A state of emergency was declared in Togo The military handed over power to an interim government led by Nicolas Grunitzky In May 1963 Grunitzky was elected President of the Republic The new leadership pursued a policy of developing relations with France His main aim was to dampen the divisions between north and south promulgate a new constitution and introduce a multiparty system On 13 January 1967 Eyadema Gnassingbe overthrew Grunitzky in a bloodless coup and assumed the presidency He created the Rally of the Togolese People Party banned activities of other political parties and introduced a 1 party system in November 1969 He was reelected in 1979 and 1986 In 1983 the privatization program launched and in 1991 other political parties were allowed In 1993 the European Union froze the partnership describing Eyadema s re election in 1993 1998 and 2003 as a seizure of power In April 2004 in Brussels talks were held between the EU and Togo on the resumption of cooperation The 2017 18 Togolese protests against the 50 year rule of the Gnassingbe family Eyadema Gnassingbe died on Saturday 5 February 2005 The military s installation of his son Faure Gnassingbe as president provoked international condemnation except from France Some democratically elected African leaders such as Abdoulaye Wade of Senegal and Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria supported the move thereby creating a rift within the African Union Gnassingbe left power and held elections which he won two months later The opposition declared that the election results were fraudulent The events of 2005 led to questions regarding the government s commitment to democracy that had been made in an attempt to normalize relations with the EU which cut off aid in 1993 due to questions about Togo s human rights situation Up to 400 people were killed in the violence surrounding the presidential elections according to the UN Around 40 000 Togolese fled to neighbouring countries Gnassingbe was reelected in 2010 and 2015 Togo became the first African nation to win an Olympic medal in canoeing at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing when Benjamin Boukpeti won bronze in the K 1 slalom In 2017 anti government protests erupted UN condemned the resulting crackdown by security forces and Gambia s foreign minister Ousainou Darboe had to issue a correction after saying that Gnassingbe should resign In the February 2020 presidential elections Faure Gnassingbe won his fourth presidential term in office as the president of Togo According to the official result he won with a margin of around 72 of the vote share This enabled him to defeat his closest challenger the former prime minister Agbeyome Kodjo who had 18 On 4 May 2020 Bitala Madjoulba the commander of a Togolese military battalion was found dead in his office The day of Madjoulba s death came after the re elected Faure Gnassingbe was sworn in for his fourth term An investigation was opened for this case resulting in Major General Kadangha Abalo Felix being prosecuted and tried for involvement in Madjoulba s assassination and conspiracy against the internal security of the state Joining the Commonwealth Togo joined the Commonwealth in June 2022 Prior to its admission at the 2022 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting Foreign Minister Robert Dussey said that he expected Commonwealth membership to provide new export markets funding for development projects and opportunities for Togolese citizens to learn English and access new educational and cultural resources GovernmentSylvanus Olympio the first president of Togo from 1960 to 1963Faure Gnassingbe the fourth and current president since 2005 Gnassingbe Eyadema the third and longest serving president from 1967 until his death in 2005 He was also the father of the current president The president is elected by universal and direct suffrage for five years and is the commander of the armed forces and has the right to initiate legislation and dissolve parliament Executive power is exercised by the president and the government The head of government is the Prime Minister who is appointed by the president President Gnassingbe Eyadema who ruled Togo under a one party system died of a heart attack on 5 February 2005 Under the Togolese Constitution the President of the Parliament Fambare Ouattara Natchaba should have become president of the country pending a presidential election to be called within 60 days Natchaba was out of the country returning on an Air France plane from Paris The Togolese army known as Forces Armees Togolaises FAT or Togolese Armed Forces closed the nation s borders forcing the plane to land in Benin With an engineered power vacuum the Parliament voted to remove the constitutional clause that would have required an election within 60 days and declared that Eyadema s son Faure Gnassingbe would inherit the presidency and hold office for the rest of his father s term Faure was sworn in on 7 February 2005 with international criticism of the succession The African Union described the takeover as a military coup d etat International pressure also came from the United Nations Within Togo opposition to the takeover culminated in riots in which between 400 and 500 people died There were uprisings in cities and towns mainly in the southern part of the country In the town of Aneho reports of a general civilian uprising followed by a massacre by government troops In response Faure Gnassingbe agreed to hold elections and on 25 February Gnassingbe resigned as president and afterward accepted the nomination to run for the office in April On 24 April 2005 Gnassingbe was elected president of Togo receiving over 60 of the vote according to official results His main rival in the race had been Emmanuel Bob Akitani from the Union des Forces du Changement UFC Electoral fraud was suspected due to a lack of independent domestic or foreign oversight Parliament designated Deputy President Bonfoh Abbass as interim president until the inauguration On 3 May 2005 Faure Gnassingbe was sworn in as the new president and the European Union suspended aid to Togo in support of the opposition claims unlike the African Union and the United States which declared the vote reasonably fair The Nigerian president and Chair of AU Olusẹgun Ọbasanjọ sought to negotiate between the incumbent government and the opposition to establish a coalition government and rejected an AU Commission appointment of former Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda as special AU envoy to Togo In June President Gnassingbe named opposition leader Edem Kodjo as the prime minister In October 2007 after postponements elections were held under proportional representation This allowed the less populated north to seat as many MPs as the more populated south The president backed party Rally of the Togolese People RPT won a majority with UFC coming second and the other parties claiming inconsequential representation Vote rigging accusations were levelled at RPT supported by the civil and military security apparatus With the presence of an EU observer mission cancelled ballots and illegal voting took place the majority of which in RPT strongholds On 3 December 2007 Komlan Mally of RPT was appointed to prime minister succeeding Agboyibor On 5 September 2008 Mally resigned as prime minister of Togo Faure Gnassingbe won re election in the March 2010 presidential election taking 61 of the vote against Jean Pierre Fabre from UFC who had been backed by an opposition coalition called FRAC Republican Front for Change Electoral observers noted procedural errors and technical problems and the opposition did not recognize the results claiming irregularities had affected the outcome Periodic protests against Faure Gnassingbe followed the election In May 2010 opposition leader Gilchrist Olympio announced that he would enter into a power sharing deal with the government a coalition arrangement which provides UFC with eight ministerial posts In June 2012 electoral reforms prompted protesters to take to the street in Lome for days protesters sought a return to the 1992 constitution that would re establish presidential term limits July 2012 saw the resignation of the prime minister Gilbert Houngbo Days later the commerce minister Kwesi Ahoomey Zunu was named to lead the new government In the same month the home of opposition leader Jean Pierre Fabre was raided by security forces and thousands of protesters again rallied publicly against the government crackdown In April 2015 President Faure Gnassingbe was re elected for a third term In February 2020 Faure Gnassingbe was again re elected for his fourth presidential term The opposition had accusations of fraud and irregularities The Gnassingbe family has ruled Togo since 1967 meaning it is Africa s longest lasting dynasty 2024 Constitutional Reform In March 2024 President Faure Gnassingbe presented a new constitution One of the constitutional changes in the new constitution has Togo go from being under a presidential system to being under a parliamentary one as well as weakening the power of the president it becoming a mostly ceremonial role strengthening the power of parliament and strengthening the power of prime minister and renaming the office President of the Council of Ministers French President du Conseil des Ministres The term of the new office will be six years renewable indefinitely whereas the term of the president is lowered to four from the previous five renewable once In April 2024 the Togolese parliament voted in favour of the new constitution and the new constitution was officially adopted on 6 May 2024 Administrative divisions Map of Togo featuring the country s five regions and their capitals Togo is divided into 5 regions which are subdivided in turn into 39 prefectures From north to south the regions are Savanes Kara Centrale Plateaux and Maritime Foreign relations While Togo s foreign policy is nonaligned it has historical and cultural ties with western Europe especially France and Germany Togo recognizes the People s Republic of China North Korea and Cuba It re established relations with Israel in 1987 Togo pursues an active foreign policy and participates in international organizations It is particularly active in West African regional affairs and in the African Union In 2017 Togo signed the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons Togo joined the Commonwealth of Nations along with Gabon at the 2022 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Kigali Rwanda In joining the Commonwealth Foreign Minister Robert Dussey told Reuters the country sought to expand its diplomatic political and economic network and to forge closer ties with the anglophone world Military FAT Forces armees togolaises Togolese armed forces consists of the army navy air force and gendarmerie Total military expenditures during the fiscal year of 2005 totalled 1 6 of the country s GDP Military bases exist in Lome Temedja Kara Niamtougou and Dapaong The current Chief of the General Staff is Brigadier General Titikpina Atcha Mohamed who took office on 19 May 2009 The air force is equipped with Alpha jets Human rights Togo was labelled Not Free by Freedom House from 1972 to 1998 and from 2002 to 2006 and has been categorized as Partly Free from 1999 to 2001 and from 2007 According to a U S State Department report based on conditions in 2010 human rights problems include security force use of excessive force including torture which resulted in deaths and injuries official impunity harsh and life threatening prison conditions arbitrary arrests and detention lengthy pretrial detention executive influence over the judiciary infringement of citizens privacy rights restrictions on freedoms of press assembly and movement official corruption discrimination and violence against women child abuse including female genital mutilation FGM and sexual exploitation of children regional and ethnic discrimination trafficking in persons especially women and children societal discrimination against persons with disabilities official and societal discrimination against homosexual persons societal discrimination against persons with HIV and forced labour including by children Same sex sexual activity is illegal in Togo with a penalty of one to three years imprisonment GeographyGhana Togo topography topographic mapMap of Togo It has an area equal to 56 785 km2 21 925 sq mi It borders the Bight of Benin in the south Ghana lies to the west Benin to the east and to the north it is bound by Burkina Faso North of the equator it lies mostly between latitudes 6 and 11 N and longitudes 0 and 2 E The coast of Togo in the Gulf of Guinea is 56 km 35 miles long and consists of lagoons with sandy beaches In the north the land is characterized by a rolling savanna in contrast to the centre of the country which is characterized by hills The south of Togo is characterized by a savanna and woodland plateau which reaches a coastal plain with lagoons and marshes The highest mountain of the country is the Mont Agou at 986 metres 3235 above sea level The longest river is the Mono River with a length of 400 km 250 miles It runs from north to south The climate is generally tropical with average temperatures ranging from 23 C 73 F on the coast to about 30 C 86 F in the northernmost regions with a drier climate and characteristics of a tropical savanna Togo contains three terrestrial ecoregions Eastern Guinean forests Guinean forest savanna mosaic and West Sudanian savanna The coast of Togo is characterized by marshes and mangroves The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5 88 10 ranking it 92nd globally out of 172 countries At least five parks and reserves have been established Abdoulaye Faunal Reserve Fazao Malfakassa National Park Fosse aux Lions National Park Koutammakou and Keran National Park WildlifeEconomyThe country possesses phosphate deposits and an export sector based on agricultural products such as coffee cocoa bean and peanuts groundnuts which together generate roughly 30 of export earnings Cotton is a cash crop The fertile land occupies 11 3 of the country most of which is developed Some crops are cassava jasmine rice maize and millet Some other sectors are brewery and the textile industry Low market prices for Togo s major export commodities coupled with the volatile political situation of the 1990s and 2000s had a negative effect on the economy It is listed in the least developed country group It serves as a regional commercial and trade centre The government s decade long efforts supported by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund IMF to carry out economic reforms to encourage investments and to create the balance between income and consumption has stalled Political unrest including private and public sector strikes throughout 1992 and 1993 jeopardized the reform program shrank the tax base and disrupted economic activities in the country citation needed Togo was ranked 117th in the Global Innovation Index in 2024 It imports machinery equipment petroleum products and food Its main import partners are France 21 1 the Netherlands 12 1 Cote d Ivoire 5 9 Germany 4 6 Italy 4 4 South Africa 4 3 and China 4 1 The main exports are cocoa coffee re export of goods phosphates and cotton Major export partners are Burkina Faso 16 6 China 15 4 the Netherlands 13 Benin 9 6 and Mali 7 4 Fishermen In terms of structural reforms it has made progress in the liberalization of the economy namely in the fields of trade and port activities The privatization program of the cotton sector telecommunications and water supply has stalled On 12 January 1994 the devaluation of the currency by 50 provided an impetus to renewed structural adjustment these efforts were facilitated by the end of strife in 1994 and a return to overt political calm Progress depends on increased openness in government financial operations to accommodate increased social service outlays and possible downsizing of the armed forces on which the regime has depended to stay in place Lack of aid and depressed cocoa prices generated a 1 fall in GDP in 1998 with growth resuming in 1999 Togo is a member of the Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa OHADA Agriculture is the backbone of the economy A shortage of funds for the purchase of irrigation equipment and fertilizers has reduced agricultural output Agriculture generated 28 2 of GDP in 2012 and employed 49 of the working population in 2010 The country is essentially self sufficient in food production Livestock production is dominated by cattle breeding Mining generated about 33 9 of GDP in 2012 and employed 12 of the population in 2010 Togo s gold production in 2015 is 16 metric tons Togo has the fourth largest phosphate deposits in the world Their production is 2 1 million tons per year There are reserves of limestone marble and salt Industry provides 20 4 of Togo s national income as it consists of light industries and builders Some reserves of limestone allows Togo to produce cement TransportRoad This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Togo has a road network of 7 520 km 4 670 mi as of 2000 with no updated data as of 2023 It has only two major highways Highway N1 and N2 connecting the capital Lome with the city of Dapaong where it gets diverged northwards to Burkina Faso and from there north west to Mali and north east to Niger N1 is the longest highway of Togo at a length of 613 km 381 mi N2 connects Lome with Aneho The extension of N2 is Highway RNIE1 or the Trans West African Coastal Highway from Aneho to Cotonou in Benin Other roads and highways are local and regional roads in the rest of the country also passing through borders with the neighbouring countries The Trans West African Coastal Highway crosses Togo connecting it to Benin and Nigeria to the east and Ghana and Ivory Coast to the west Once the construction in Liberia and Sierra Leone part gets completed the highway will continue west to seven other Economic Community of West African States ECOWAS nations Railways Railway network of Togo Togo has a railway network of 568 km 353 mi as of 2008 with no further updates in the network as of 2023 It follows a track gauge of 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in narrow gauge Trains are operated by Societe Nationale des Chemins de Fer Togolais SNCT which was established as a result of the restructuring and renaming of Reseau des Chemins de Fer du Togo from 1997 to 1998 Between Hahotoe and the port of Kpeme the Compagnie Togolaise des Mines du Benin CTMB operated phosphate trains A train from Lome to Kpalime at an intermediate station The following are the railway networks present in the country Lome Aneho railway Lome Blitta railway Lome Kpalime railway Hahotoe Kpeme railway operated by CTMB Air Lome Tokoin International Airport Togo has a total of eight airports as of 2012 out of which two are international airports and six are domestic airports The only major airport of the country is Lome Tokoin International Airport serving the capital Lome and another Niamtougou International Airport in Niamtougou serving the country s northern part Water Port of Lome Togo in terms of water transport is only 50 km 31 mi navigable mostly seasonally on the Mono River depending on rainfall as of 2011 Togo has only one large container port for carrying trade operations in and out of the country the Port of Lome in the capital DemographicsPopulationYear Million1950 1 42000 5 02021 8 6 The November 2010 census gave Togo a population of 6 191 155 more than double the total counted in the last census in 2022 the Togo population was 8 680 832 That census taken in 1981 showed the nation had a population of 2 719 567 The capital Lome grew from 375 499 in 1981 to 837 437 in 2010 When the urban population of surrounding Golfe prefecture is added the Lome Agglomeration contained 1 477 660 residents in 2010 Other cities in Togo according to the new census were Sokode 95 070 Kara 94 878 Kpalime 75 084 Atakpame 69 261 Dapaong 58 071 and Tsevie 54 474 With an estimated population of 8 644 829 as of 2021 update Togo is the 107th largest country by population Most of the population 65 live in rural villages dedicated to agriculture or pastures The population of Togo shows a stronger growth from 1961 the year after independence to 2003 it quintupled Largest cities or towns in Togo According to the 2010 CensusRank Name Region Pop Lome Sokode 1 Lome Maritime 1 477 658 Kara Kpalime2 Sokode Centrale 117 8113 Kara Kara 94 8784 Kpalime Plateaux 75 0845 Atakpame Plateaux 69 2616 Dapaong Savanes 58 0717 Tsevie Maritime 54 4748 Anie Plateaux 37 3989 Notse Plateaux 35 03910 Cinkasse Savanes 26 926 Ethnic groups People in the 1980s In Togo there are about 40 different ethnic groups the most numerous of which are the Ewe in the south who make up 32 of the population Along the southern coastline they account for 21 of the population Also found are Kotokoli or Tem and Tchamba in the centre and the Kabye people in the north 22 The fr are 14 of the population Sometimes the Ewes and Ouatchis are considered the same while the French who studied both groups considered them different people Other ethnic groups include the Mina Mossi the Moba and Bassar the Tchokossi of Mango about 8 Religion Religion in Togo Arda 2020 estimate Christianity 47 84 47 4 Traditional faiths 33 43 33 1 Islam 18 36 18 2 No religion 0 23 0 23 Other 1 14 1 13 0 0 00 0 0 00 Church in Kpalime According to a 2012 US government religious freedoms report in 2004 the University of Lome estimated that 33 of the population were traditional animists 28 were Roman Catholic 20 Sunni Muslim 9 Protestant and another 5 belonged to other Christian denominations The remaining 5 were reported to include persons not affiliated with any religious group The report noted that many Christians and Muslims continue to perform indigenous religious practices In 2023 The World Factbook stated that 42 3 of the population was Christian and 14 Muslim with 36 9 being followers of indigenous beliefs less than one percent being Hindus Jews and followers of other religions and 6 2 being unaffiliated Christianity began to spread from the middle of the 15th century after the arrival of Portuguese Catholic missionaries Germans introduced Protestantism in the second half of the 19th century when a hundred missionaries of the Bremen Missionary Society were sent to the coastal areas of Togo and Ghana Togo s Protestants were known as Brema a corruption of the word Bremen After World War I German missionaries had to leave which gave birth to the early autonomy of the In 2022 Freedom House rated Togo s religious freedom as 3 out of 4 noting that religious freedom is constitutionally protected and generally respected in practice Islam Catholicism and Protestantism are recognised by the state other groups must register as religious associations to receive similar benefits The registration process has been subject to long delays with almost 900 applications pending at the beginning of 2021 Languages According to Ethnologue 39 distinct languages are spoken in the country some of them by communities that number fewer than 100 000 members Of the 39 languages the sole official language is French Two spoken indigenous languages were designated politically as national languages in 1975 Ewe Ewe Eʋegbe French Eve and Kabiye Though not native to most groups French is used in formal education legislature all forms of media administration and commerce Ewe is a language of wider communication in the south Tem functions to a limited extent as a trade language in some northern towns Officially Ewe and Kabiye are national languages which in the Togolese context means languages that are promoted in formal education and used in the media Others are Gen Aja Moba Ntcham and Ife In joining the Commonwealth the Togolese government has anticipated opportunities for Togolese citizens to learn English Health The Human Rights Measurement Initiative finds that Togo is fulfilling 73 1 of what it should be fulfilling for the right to health based on its level of income When looking at the right to health with respect to children Togo achieves 93 8 of what is expected based on its current income In regards to the right to health amongst the adult population the country achieves 88 2 of what is expected based on the nation s level of income It falls into the very bad category when evaluating the right to reproductive health because the nation is fulfilling 37 3 of what the nation is expected to achieve based on the resources income it has available Health expenditure in Togo was 5 2 of GDP in 2014 which ranks the country in 45th place in the world The infant mortality rate is approximately 43 7 deaths per 1 000 children in 2016 Male life expectancy at birth was at 62 3 in 2016 whereas it was at 67 7 years for females There were 5 physicians per 100 000 people in 2008 According to a 2013 UNICEF report 4 of women in Togo have undergone female genital mutilation As of 2015 update the maternal mortality rate per 100 000 births for Togo is 368 compared with 350 in 2010 and 539 7 in 1990 The under 5 mortality rate per 1 000 births is 100 and the neonatal mortality as a percentage of under 5 s mortality is 32 In Togo the number of midwives per 1 000 live births is 2 and the lifetime risk of death for pregnant women is 1 in 67 In 2016 Togo had 4100 2400 6100 new HIV infections and 5100 3100 7700 AIDS related deaths There were 100 000 73 000 130 000 people living with HIV in 2016 among whom 51 37 67 were accessing antiretroviral therapy Among pregnant women living with HIV 86 59 gt 95 were accessing treatment or prophylaxis to prevent transmission of HIV to their children An estimated lt 1000 lt 500 1400 children were newly infected with HIV due to mother to child transmission Among people living with HIV approximately 42 30 55 had suppressed viral loads AFD is working to enhance living conditions in Lome the coastal city with a population of 1 4 million by modernizing solid waste management services The project involves enhancing garbage collection through the construction of a new landfill that meets international standards In 2024 a Universal Health Insurance program was launched covering 800 000 people within six months and implemented through the National Social Security Fund and the National Health Insurance Institute Education Education in Togo is compulsory for six years In 1996 the gross primary enrollment rate was 119 6 and the net primary enrollment rate was 81 3 In 2011 the net enrollment rate was 94 The education system has suffered from teacher shortages lower educational quality in rural areas and high repetition and dropout rates CultureTaberma houses The culture reflects the influences of ethnic groups the largest of which are the Ewe Tem Tchamba and Kabre Some people follow native animistic practices and beliefs Ewe statuary is characterized by its statuettes which illustrate the worship of the ibeji Sculptures and hunting trophies were used rather than the more ubiquitous African masks The wood carvers of Kloto has their chains of marriage Two characters are connected by rings whittled from one piece of wood The dyed fabric batiks of the artisanal centre of Kloto represent stylized and coloured scenes of ancient everyday life There are loincloths used in the ceremonies of the weavers of Assahoun Works of the painter Sokey Edorh are inspired by the immense arid extents swept by the dry wind and where the soil keeps the prints of the men and the animals The plastics technician Paul Ahyi practiced the zota a kind of pyroengraving and his monumental achievements decorate Lome Basketball is Togo s second most practiced sport Togo featured a national team in beach volleyball that competed at the 2018 2020 CAVB Beach Volleyball Continental Cup in the men s section Mass media in Togo includes radio television and online and print formats The fr news agency began in 1975 The Union des Journalistes Independants du Togo press association is headquartered in Lome Togolese Television is the state owned service See alsoAfrica portalOutline of Togo Horses in TogoNotes ˈ t 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article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Kayi Lawson 28 May 2021 Le basketball une discipline en quetes de moyen et de vocations au Togo VOA Afrique in French Archived from the original on 4 November 2023 Retrieved 7 August 2021 Continental Cup Finals start in Africa FIVB 22 June 2021 Archived from the original on 7 August 2021 Retrieved 7 August 2021 Togo Directory Africa South of the Sahara 2003 Regional Surveys of the World Europa Publications 2003 p 1106 ISBN 9781857431315 ISSN 0065 3896 Archived from the original on 18 May 2024 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Further readingBullock A L C Germany s Colonial Demands Oxford University Press 1939 Grunder Horst Geschichte der deutschen Kolonien 3 Aufl Paderborn 1995 Mwakikagile Godfrey Military Coups in West Africa Since The Sixties Nova Science Publishers Inc 2001 Packer George The Village of Waiting Farrar Straus and Giroux 1988 Piot Charles Nostalgia for the Future West Africa After the Cold War University of Chicago Press 2010 Schnee Dr Heinrich German Colonization Past and Future the Truth about the German Colonies George Allen amp Unwin 1926 Sebald Peter Togo 1884 bis 1914 Eine Geschichte der deutschen Musterkolonie auf der Grundlage amtlicher Quellen Berlin 1987 Seely Jennifer The Legacies of Transition Governments in Africa The Cases of Benin and Togo Palgrave Macmillan 2009 Zurstrassen Bettina Ein Stuck deutscher Erde schaffen Koloniale Beamte in Togo 1884 1914 Frankfurt M Campus 2008 Campus Forschung 931 External linksTogo at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from WiktionaryMedia from CommonsNews from WikinewsTexts from WikisourceTravel information from Wikivoyage Official website Republic of Togo in French National Assembly of Togo official site Togo profile from ECOWAS Country Profile from the BBC News Wikimedia Atlas of Togo Geographic data related to Togo at OpenStreetMap News headline links from Al Jazeera Togo Democracy Now Country Profile from New Internationalist Togo from Encyclopaedia Britannica 8 N 1 E 8 N 1 E 8 1