Togo's President Faure Gnassingbe has named Selom Klassou as the country's new prime minister after winning elections in April, extending his family's nearly five-decade grip on power. Klassou, the first vice-president of the National Assembly and former sports and primary education minister, succeeds Kwesi Seleagodji Ahoomey-Zunu, who resigned his post on May 22.
"Selom Klassou has been named prime minister," said a statement read out by Date Têvi-Benissan, the presidency secretary-general, on television on Friday evening. Gnassingbe was sworn in for his third term as president on May 4 after winning nearly 59 percent of the vote in the small west African country that his family has controlled since 1967. The main opposition party, Combat for Political Change (CAP 2015), dismissed Gnassingbe's election win as fraudulent, but international observers broadly praised the polls as free and fair. Togo's president reappoints the government and its leader after any legislative or presidential election.