LOME, Togo — Togo's ruling party, led by a man whose family has governed the small West African nation for 46 years, increased its share of the legislature in last week's elections, the electoral commission announced Sunday.
The provisional results dealt a blow to opposition leaders who had hoped recent signs of discontent would translate into gains at the ballot box. A spokesman for one of the leading opposition parties said the results were unacceptable and vowed to challenge them.
President Faure Gnassingbe's Union for the Republic party won 62 of 91 seats, up from 50 of the legislature's 81 seats in 2007, according to totals read out on state television Sunday night by Angele Aguigah, the electoral commission president. The Let's Save Togo opposition coalition came in second with 19 seats, followed by the Rainbow Coalition with six seats and the Union of Forces for Change with three seats. The final seat went to a small independent party.
The official results immediately drew cries of protest from the opposition, who had earlier faulted the government for mismanaging the poll, citing delays caused by missing ballot papers and other materials when voters lined up Thursday morning. But observers from the West African regional bloc ECOWAS and the African Union both said the poll had been conducted fairly well, with no irregularities that would undermine the results.
"We cannot accept these results. We already knew that they were more or less prepared," said Eric Dupuy, press secretary for the opposition National Alliance for Change, a member of the Let's Save Togo coalition.
"We have always said the elections were made in haste and there is a lot of fraud and irregularities. We will show this in the hours and days ahead," Dupuy added.
He said the opposition planned to appeal to the Constitutional Court, which announces final results.
Eyadema Gnassingbe came to power in Togo through a coup in 1967 and ruled for 38 years until his death in 2005, when his son Faure Gnassingbe, the current president, took over. Development has lagged under Gnassingbe, and the African Development Bank has voiced particular concern about youth unemployment and underemployment in a country where 60 percent of the population is under 25.