Emmanuel Bodjollé

Emmanuel Bodjollé (born 1928) was Chairman of the nine-member Insurrection Committee that overthrew the government of Togolese President Sylvanus Olympio on 13 January 1963.[1]

Emmanuel Bodjollé
Born1928 (age 9192)
OccupationSoldier
Known forChairman of the nine-member Insurrection Committee that overthrew the government of Togolese President Sylvanus Olympio

Biography

Bodjollé, a former master-sergeant in the French army,[2] had been among a group of around 300 soldiers who on discharge from the French services had not been integrated into the Togolese army.[3] He led a conspiracy of around thirty other former non-commissioned officers, who arrested the ministers of Olympio's government. The coup saw former president Olympio shot dead at the gate of the US embassy compound by Etienne Eyadéma, later known as Gnassingbé Eyadéma, a later president of Togo.[4]

Bodjollé's coup installed Nicolas Grunitzky as Togolese leader.[3]

gollark: It's on my fileserver somewhere. I'll check tomorrow.
gollark: There was that interesting paper where someone used genetic algorithms to automatically design a circuit of some kind on a FPGA, and it came up with an incomprehensible but very effective design which used weird properties of the hardware a human wouldn't consider.
gollark: You throw big piles of training data and computing power at a neural network and it "learns" to do some task or other, but a human looking at the net might have no clue how it's managing it.
gollark: Actually, with lots of modern AI stuff people *don't* understand exactly how they work.
gollark: I mean, what are paper signatures actually verifying? That you... can print/write, somehow, a vaguely correct-looking squiggle on the page?

References

  1. "Togo power held by disgruntled former soldiers". Hartford Courant. 15 January 1963.
  2. Adebajo, Adekeye (2004). West Africa's security challenges: building peace in a troubled region. Lynne Rienner. p. 147. ISBN 1-58826-284-7.
  3. Onwumechili, Chuka (1998). African democratization and military coups. Greenwood. p. 53. ISBN 0-275-96325-X.
  4. "Death at the gate". Time. 25 January 1963.


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