Madagascar coup leader Randrianirina says he will be sworn in as president
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Colonel Michael Randrianirina had led a coup to oust Madagascan President Andry Rajoelina.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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ANTANANARIVO/NAIROBI - Madagascar’s new military ruler Michael Randrianirina said on Oct 15 he would soon be sworn in as president of the African island nation after a coup he led to oust President Andry Rajoelina.
Mr Rajoelina, who was impeached by lawmakers after fleeing abroad at the weekend, has condemned the takeover and refused to step down despite Gen Z demonstrations demanding his resignation and widespread defections in the security forces.
Mr Randrianirina has told Malagasy citizens that the military has taken power and dissolved all institutions except the Lower House of Parliament or National Assembly.
“We will be sworn in soon,” the army colonel told a press briefing on Oct 15, a day after the High Constitutional Court invited him to serve as president of the former French colony.
“We took responsibility yesterday.”
Two sources close to him earlier told Reuters he would be sworn in as president in the next day or two.
Mr Randrianirina said on Oct 14 that a committee led by the military would rule for up to two years alongside a transitional government before organising new elections.
Mr Randrianirina was a commander in the elite Capsat army unit that played a key role in the 2009 coup that brought Mr Rajoelina to power but broke ranks with him last week, urging soldiers not to fire on protesters.
Mr Rajoelina fled Madagascar on Oct 12 aboard a French military plane, security sources told Reuters. He has said his life was at risk and is now believed to be in Dubai, according to three diplomatic and opposition sources.
The 51-year-old former DJ himself rose to power in a coup in 2009 on the back of youth protests, becoming the world’s youngest head of state at 34. But promises to improve living standards and eradicate corruption were never fulfilled.
Madagascar, where the average age is less than 20, has a population of about 30 million, three-quarters of whom live in poverty. Between its independence in 1960 and 2020, gross domestic product per capita plunged 45 per cent, according to the World Bank.
As well as the Capsat unit, the paramilitary gendarmerie and the police have also broken ranks with Mr Rajoelina. REUTERS