Fambaré Ouattara Natchaba |top| -

Nevertheless, Faberé Ouattara Natchaba’s legacy is not one of defeat but of enduring principle. In a region where power is often inherited through barrels of guns, he represented the rare figure who placed a piece of paper—the constitution—above personal ambition or party loyalty. He could have easily returned to Lomé, sworn loyalty to Faure, and preserved a comfortable political career. Instead, he chose constitutional exile. His stand serves as a reminder that democratic breakdowns rarely occur without accomplices. The 2005 Togolese crisis succeeded not only because the military intervened, but because nearly every other institutional actor—the Assembly, the judiciary, the civil service—failed to resist. Natchaba’s refusal to become an accomplice, however solitary and futile, preserves a benchmark for accountability.

Natchaba’s political biography is essential to understanding his actions. A seasoned diplomat and lawyer, he served as Togo’s ambassador to France and later as the President of the National Assembly under Eyadéma’s Rassemblement du Peuple Togolais (RPT) party. He was not a revolutionary opposition figure; he was a loyal member of the ruling apparatus. Yet, crucially, he was a constitutional loyalist. Under Togo’s 1992 constitution—however imperfectly implemented—the President of the National Assembly was designated as the interim head of state in the event of a presidential vacancy, tasked with organizing new elections within sixty days. When Eyadéma died on February 5, 2005, Natchaba was en route by airplane from Abidjan to Lomé. He was the lawful, unambiguous successor. fambaré ouattara natchaba

The crisis that unfolded was a direct test of constitutional fidelity. The moment news of Eyadéma’s death broke, the Togolese armed forces, long the bedrock of the Eyadéma dynasty, acted with ruthless efficiency. They sealed the nation’s borders, closed airspace, and refused Natchaba’s plane landing rights, forcing it to divert to Benin. Simultaneously, the military announced on state television that the presidential succession had “automatically” devolved to Faure Gnassingbé, Eyadéma’s son. The National Assembly, under intense pressure, was convened not to confirm Natchaba but to retroactively amend the constitution, removing the requirement for an election and allowing Faure to serve the remainder of his father’s term. Instead, he chose constitutional exile