play videoEmmanuel Bodjollé, a Togolese and Chairman of the nine-member Insurrection Committee
His name was Emmanuel Bodjollé, a Togolese and Chairman of the nine-member Insurrection Committee that spearheaded a coup d’etat in Togo on January 12 and 13, 1963.
Bodjollé was a former master sergeant in the French army who was one of about 300 soldiers released by the French army after Togo’s independence who were unemployed because of limited space in the Togolese Armed Forces.
He carried out the coup assisted by Étienne Eyadéma (later Gnassingbé Eyadéma) and Kléber Dadjo, some three years after Togo gained independence; on April 27, 1960.
The coup which led to the assassination of Togo’s first president, Sylvanus Olympio was resultant of disaffection and discontent by the said soldiers whose application to join Togo’s army had been refused thereby making them noncommissioned officers.
Emmanuel and Etienne together with other colleagues had tried several times to get President Olympio to increase their funds and enlist more of the ex-French Army troops who had returned to the country.
On one occasion, history notes that Lieutenant Emmanuel Bodjollé, who was leading the group of ex-servicemen was told by the president Olympio that, “I shall employ unemployed school-leavers or people who fought for independence, and not you mercenaries who were killing our Algerian brothers when we were fighting for independence”.
This is said to have angered veterans, who began to plan a coup in coordination with officers from Togo’s gendarmerie.
Olympio was shot down while trying to scale up the wall outside the US Embassy in Lome after fleeing from his home upon sensing a previous attack at his home.