Kléber Dadjo

Kléber Dadjo (12 August 1914 23 September 1988 or 23 September 1989)[1][2] served as Interim President of Togo in his role as Chairman of the National Reconciliation Committee from 14 January 1967 to 14 April 1967 following the overthrow of President Nicolas Grunitzky's government.

Biography

Col. Kléber Dadjo, was born in Siou on August 12, 1914.[3] He was of the Nawde (or Losso) ethnic and linguistic group.

Col. Dadjo served in the British Army during World War II and in the French Army in the Indochina and Algerian conflicts. At the time of Togo's independence in 1960, he was the longest-serving and highest-ranking Togolese in the French Army. He held the rank of Captain and commanded Togo's tiny defence force, the Garde Togolaise. He was promoted to Major and eventually to Colonel after the 1963 coup d'état and served as head of the military cabinet of President Nicolas Grunitzky.

After the second military coup d'état on January 13, 1967, Dadjo was named interim President of Togo (as Chairman of the Comité National de Reconciliation), a position that he held until April 14, 1967, when Lt. Col. Gnassingbé Etienne Eyadéma was named president. From 1967 through 1968, he served as Minister of Justice and as Chef du Cabinet Militaire de la Présidence de la République.

In 1968, he retired and returned to his home in Siou where he became Chef de Canton.

He died on 23 September 1988 or 23 September 1989.[4]

In 2006, Col. Dadjo was recognised by the government of President Faure Gnassingbé along with former Presidents Sylvanus Olympio and Nicolas Grunitzky and former Vice-President Antoine Méatchi as part of a decision to rehabilitate the image of Togo's previous leaders. The former avenue de la Nouvelle Marche in Lomé was renamed avenue Kléber Dadjo in his honor.

Col. Dadjo is frequently and erroneously identified in print as a Kabyé rather than a Nawde (or Losso).[5]

Notes

  1. Profile of Kléber Dadjo
  2. "kleber dadjo". Retrieved 6 November 2017.
  3. As reported by the Chef de Canton de Siou in June 2007. Currently seeking the precise date.
  4. Sources include: Decalo, Samuel, Historical Dictionary of Togo, Third Edition, Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 1996, pp. 106-107.
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