The Prague Post - Military seizes power in Madagascar as president impeached

EUR -
AED 4.308783
AFN 76.840025
ALL 96.437705
AMD 444.847258
ANG 2.099923
AOA 1074.54967
ARS 1682.545874
AUD 1.74054
AWG 2.11156
AZN 1.989149
BAM 1.954224
BBD 2.361595
BDT 143.434325
BGN 1.970051
BHD 0.442337
BIF 3471.837311
BMD 1.173089
BND 1.503468
BOB 8.102155
BRL 6.304645
BSD 1.172554
BTN 106.607027
BWP 15.668763
BYN 3.380031
BYR 22992.543335
BZD 2.358088
CAD 1.622271
CDF 2551.468204
CHF 0.926269
CLF 0.026255
CLP 1036.682466
CNY 8.17508
CNH 8.159672
COP 4297.787316
CRC 571.714565
CUC 1.173089
CUP 31.086857
CVE 110.176147
CZK 24.332387
DJF 208.481279
DKK 7.471047
DOP 74.350039
DZD 152.194051
EGP 55.685244
ERN 17.596334
ETB 182.976957
FJD 2.666199
FKP 0.873616
GBP 0.871898
GEL 3.155684
GGP 0.873616
GHS 12.721253
GIP 0.873616
GMD 86.808529
GNF 10268.718645
GTQ 8.990749
GYD 245.300673
HKD 9.148393
HNL 30.923062
HRK 7.533342
HTG 153.496211
HUF 384.746783
IDR 19900.280875
ILS 3.71065
IMP 0.873616
INR 106.804468
IQD 1536.061222
IRR 49416.372022
ISK 146.20221
JEP 0.873616
JMD 184.631102
JOD 0.831754
JPY 185.329873
KES 151.257923
KGS 102.586408
KHR 4722.01073
KMF 498.562646
KPW 1055.76742
KRW 1734.359241
KWD 0.360678
KYD 0.977075
KZT 595.631718
LAK 25355.363026
LBP 104998.19495
LKR 363.121678
LRD 215.16556
LSL 19.270559
LTL 3.463826
LVL 0.709589
LYD 6.372861
MAD 10.744435
MDL 19.974125
MGA 5333.448707
MKD 61.570346
MMK 2463.52906
MNT 4180.365225
MOP 9.417265
MRU 46.867203
MUR 54.18532
MVR 18.136148
MWK 2033.165001
MXN 20.650118
MYR 4.756291
MZN 74.952645
NAD 19.270559
NGN 1663.897815
NIO 43.145205
NOK 11.709621
NPR 170.571443
NZD 2.008082
OMR 0.451076
PAB 1.172499
PEN 3.936525
PGK 5.011958
PHP 69.632802
PKR 328.037468
PLN 4.224082
PYG 7830.684833
QAR 4.274952
RON 5.092264
RSD 117.414907
RUB 91.561198
RWF 1710.055303
SAR 4.399052
SBD 9.529718
SCR 16.883898
SDG 705.611929
SEK 10.697891
SGD 1.505759
SHP 0.880121
SLE 28.330281
SLL 24599.087787
SOS 668.92917
SRD 44.942185
STD 24280.572719
STN 24.479215
SVC 10.259726
SYP 12973.865053
SZL 19.273553
THB 36.399192
TJS 10.94526
TMT 4.117542
TND 3.425138
TOP 2.824516
TRY 50.761433
TTD 7.94522
TWD 37.117117
TZS 2962.049246
UAH 50.749173
UGX 4056.728394
USD 1.173089
UYU 45.063658
UZS 14131.603367
VES 400.393203
VND 30811.181158
VUV 142.124856
WST 3.276772
XAF 655.403299
XAG 0.012385
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.170332
XCG 2.113106
XDR 0.821874
XOF 655.42842
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.752457
ZAR 19.25649
ZMK 10559.206366
ZMW 23.478964
ZWL 377.734162
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -1.5400

    82.5

    -1.87%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    17.1

    +0.29%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.4

    -0.34%

  • BCC

    -1.7000

    83.81

    -2.03%

  • VOD

    0.0250

    13.495

    +0.19%

  • NGG

    -0.9200

    79.97

    -1.15%

  • RIO

    0.4550

    85.585

    +0.53%

  • BCE

    0.3130

    24.453

    +1.28%

  • JRI

    -0.0250

    13.675

    -0.18%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.01

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    -1.2150

    40.415

    -3.01%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    47.65

    -1.2%

  • BTI

    -1.6950

    56.525

    -3%

  • BP

    -0.2450

    35.135

    -0.7%

  • AZN

    -4.1770

    90.25

    -4.63%

Military seizes power in Madagascar as president impeached
Military seizes power in Madagascar as president impeached / Photo: Luis TATO - AFP

Military seizes power in Madagascar as president impeached

An elite military unit that backed youth-led anti-government street protests said Tuesday it had taken power in Madagascar after the national assembly voted to impeach President Andry Rajoelina.

Text size:

Rajoelina, who was in hiding reportedly out of the country, had refused growing demands to step down after demonstrations started on September 25 won the backing of the CAPSAT military unit at the weekend.

CAPSAT commander Colonel Michael Randrianirina read out a statement at the presidential palace saying the unit would set up a governing committee composed of officers from the army, gendarmerie and national police.

"Perhaps in time it will include senior civilian advisers. It is this committee that will carry out the work of the presidency," Randrianirina said.

"At the same time, after a few days, we will set up a civilian government," he said.

"We have taken power," he confirmed to AFP afterwards.

After the announcement, officers from the unit rolled through the capital in armoured Humvees and pick-up trucks, AFP journalists saw.

Crowds lined the pavements, cheering and waving as they passed, while some followed the convoy in their own cars, honking their horns in a victory lap through a city still on edge.

The near-daily protests, led by a youth movement called Gen Z, took a turn at the weekend when CAPSAT -- which played a major role in the 2009 coup that first brought Rajoelina to power -- joined the demonstrators.

They were followed by the gendarmerie paramilitary police force, which admitted to "faults and excesses" in their response to the demonstrations.

- 'Safe place' -

Parliamentarians on Tuesday pushed ahead with the impeachment vote despite Rajoelina's attempt to block it by issuing a decree hours earlier to dissolve the national assembly.

The impeachment vote passed with 130 votes in favour -- well above the two-thirds constitutional threshold required in the 163-member chamber.

In a statement as voting was under way, the presidency said the session was "devoid of any legal basis".

The youth-led protests were ignited by anger over power and water shortages before developing into demonstrations against the president and ruling elite.

After reports that he had left the country with the assistance of France, Rajoelina said in a national address late Monday that he was in a "safe place to protect my life" but did not reveal his location.

The 51-year-old made clear he would not step down, saying he was "on a mission to find solutions" to the political crisis and would not let the impoverished Indian Ocean nation "destroy itself".

Civil servants and trade unionists joined the large crowd in the capital in a fresh demonstration demanding that Rajoelina quit and also expressing anger at reports of French involvement in helping him leave the country.

Before Monday's address, Rajoelina had not appeared in public since Wednesday when he pledged at a public meeting to address complaints against his government.

Rajoelina later disputed the toll, saying there were "12 confirmed deaths and all of these individuals were looters and vandals".

To try to defuse the protests, Rajoelina sacked his entire government last month. Meeting one of the demands of the protesters, the president of the Senate was replaced.

Madagascar has had a turbulent political history since the country off the east coast of Africa gained independence from France in 1960.

strs-br/ho/kjm

A.Novak--TPP