0 0
Read Time:2 Minute, 45 Second

By Donis Ayivi/Sigma Corporation Afrique

In Lomé, Togo has chosen to break with declaratory diplomacy surrounding the crisis in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. The high-level meeting held on 17 January marks a clear determination. To reorganize the African action and test its real effectiveness. At the heart of this sequence lies a simple yet decisive requirement to deliver results.

As eastern DRC remains one of the continent’s most persistent conflict theaters, Lomé asserted itself on Saturday, 17 January, as a space for political clarification. By hosting this high-level meeting, Togo did not seek to multiply symbols but rather to refocus African action on its recurring weak point: implementation.

The Lomé meeting on 17 January highlights Togo’s push for tangible results and accountable African-led peace efforts in eastern DR Congo.

Led by Faure Essozimna Gnassingbé, President of the Togolese Republic Council, and the African Union’s designated mediator, the Lomé sequence fits within a logic of accountability. The objective was not to add yet another framework but to question the continent’s collective capacity to organize its peace mechanisms and to assume their political consequences.

A Diplomacy of Method

The 17th January meeting is part of a carefully prepared diplomatic build-up. The day before, a technical session aligned the actors involved, clarified roles, and structured priorities. This preparatory phase reflects a deliberate break with usual practices: here, method precedes announcement, and coordination takes precedence over staging.

President Faure Gnassingbé leads the Lomé meeting to strengthen African action in eastern DR Congo

In an African environment marked by the coexistence of multiple mediation initiatives, Lomé advances a clear position: dispersion weakens action. The proliferation of formats around the Congolese crisis has led to diluted responsibilities and a loss of strategic clarity. In response, Togo advocates a simplified, piloted, and coherent architecture. The one capable of linking political decision-making, institutional coordination, and operational implementation.

This approach reflects a firm conviction: Africa lacks neither diagnoses nor commitments, but continuity in action. The Lomé meeting thus aims to close the gap between diplomatic discourse and its concrete effects on the ground.

Political accountability and a results-driven imperative

The message delivered in Lomé is unequivocal. Peace can no longer be assessed by the number of meetings held or communiqués issued. It must be judged by tangible outcomes: population security, access to essential services, territorial stabilization, and the restoration of trust.

The Lomé meeting emphasizes method and coordination to turn African diplomacy into concrete results.

From this perspective, African mediation is called upon to change register. The task is no longer to innovate institutionally but to make existing mechanisms work with rigor. Clarifying decision-making chains, strengthening coordination among actors, and embedding action over time become the minimum conditions for credibility.

By placing Lomé at the center of this dynamic, Togo adopts a demanding posture that of a facilitator who rejects comfort diplomacy and holds each actor accountable. The 17 January meeting thus emerges as a pivotal moment, not because of its solemnity, but because of the scrutiny it applies to African action itself.

For the continent, the challenge is now clear: to demonstrate that peace can be conceived, led, and consolidated by Africa not as a principle, but as a sustainable practice.

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

Average Rating

5 Star
0%
4 Star
0%
3 Star
0%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *