Cantons of Togo
The cantons of Togo are the third-level administrative units of the country, after regions and prefectures; which in turn they are subdivided into villages. They are similar to communes or sub-districts or sub-prefectures of other French African nations.
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Togo |
---|
Africa portal |
As of 2013 there were 387 cantons of Togo.[1]
Centrale Region
- 04 Prefectures and 01 Sub-Prefecture; 60 Cantons
Blitta Prefecture
|
Sotouboua Prefecture
|
Mô Sub-Prefecture
|
Tchamba Prefecture
|
Tchaoudjo Prefecture
|
Kara Region
- 07 Prefectures; 75 Cantons
Assoli Prefecture
|
Bassar Prefecture
|
Binah Prefecture
|
Dankpen Prefecture
|
Doufelgou Prefecture
|
Kéran Prefecture
|
Kozah Prefecture
|
Maritime Region
- 07 Prefectures; 73 Cantons
Avé Prefecture
|
Bas-Mono Prefecture
|
Golfe Prefecture
|
Lacs Prefecture
|
Vo Prefecture
|
Yoto Prefecture
|
Zio Prefecture
|
Plateaux Region
- 12 Prefectures; 110 Cantons
Agou Prefecture
|
Akébou Prefecture
|
Amou Prefecture
|
Anié Prefecture
|
Danyi Prefecture
|
Est-Mono Prefecture
|
Haho Prefecture
|
Kloto Prefecture
|
Kpélé Prefecture
|
Moyen-Mono Prefecture
|
Ogou Prefecture
|
Wawa Prefecture
|
Savanes Region
- 05 Prefectures; 69 Cantons
Cinkassé Prefecture
|
Kpendjal Prefecture
|
Oti Prefecture
|
Tandjouaré Prefecture
|
Tone Prefecture
|
References
- "Le processus de décentralisation au Togo" (PDF) (in French). Cifal-ouaga.org. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
External links
- List of cantons (in French)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.