Togo Roundup: ECOWAS relocation, fintech breakthrough, economic rebound

European Parliament calls for release of Abdoul Aziz Goma
On September 11, the European Parliament adopted a resolution (2025/2862(RSP)) condemning the detention of Abdoul Aziz Goma, an Irish-Togolese citizen held in Lomé since 2018. Lawmakers denounced torture, inhumane conditions, and an unfair trial that led to a ten-year sentence after a one-day hearing in February. They urged his immediate release, medical evacuation, and annulment of his conviction, while warning of democratic backsliding in Togo. Goma has been on hunger strike since August 27, with reports of critical health complications.
ECOWAS Parliament relocates session amid rising tensions
The ECOWAS Parliament has shifted its second extraordinary session of 2025 from Lomé to Abuja, citing “circumstances beyond our control”. The move came shortly after the June 6 Movement (M66) announced a September 20 protest demanding President Faure Gnassingbé’s resignation and the release of political prisoners. Civil society actors view the relocation as recognition of mounting unrest following Togo’s contested constitutional changes earlier this year.
Togo summons EU ambassador over resolution
Following the European Parliament’s resolution, Togolese authorities summoned Gwilym Ceri Jones, the EU’s ambassador in Lomé, on September 12. Officials accused the EU of interference and defended the independence of Togo’s judiciary. The move came as international voices, including UN experts, continued to criticise Goma’s detention and trial.
Fintech becomes Togo’s first to win BCEAO authorisation
Togo-based Ollo Africa has become the country’s first fintech to win authorisation from the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO) to operate across the eight-nation UEMOA zone. The company is launching Ohana Africa, a platform designed to digitise traditional group savings systems and expand financial inclusion. Backed by partnerships with Ecobank, Ollo Africa aims to reach one million users in Togo before scaling regionally.
Togo posts sharp economic rebound in 2024
Togo’s economy surged in late 2024, with GDP growing 17.7% in the fourth quarter compared to the same period in 2023, according to INSEED data. Annual growth reached 6.5%, driven by strong performances in agriculture, construction, extractive industries, and services. While electricity, hospitality, and public administration contracted, officials credited reforms under the Government Roadmap 2020–2025 for strengthening economic resilience through diversification, logistics, and infrastructure investment.
This story is written and edited by the Global South World team, you can contact us here.