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July 30, 2010   Print  Email


Madagascar's military gives power to opposition leader

African Union condemns unlawful power transfer

Posted by Agencies at 05:56 AM GMT on Mar 18, 2009

ANTANANARIVO (Reuters): Madagascar's month-long power struggle has ended, with military chiefs formally endorsing opposition leader Andry Rajoelina as president of a transitional authority today.

"We give full powers to Mr Andry Rajoelina to become president of the high transitional authority," navy admiral Hyppolite Ramaroson told reporters.

Former president Marc Ravalomanana resigned today and asked Ramaroson to form a military government, but the top brass rejected the idea of the security forces running the country.

Madagascar's opposition leader Andry Rajoelina is seen at the presidential palace in Antananarivo, March 17, 2009. REUTERS/Siphiwe SibekoDespite concerns from abroad that he should have gone to the ballot box, Rajoelina mustered sufficient domestic support to consolidate power on the huge, mineral-rich island off the coast of southeast Africa.

The man whose street protests since the start of 2009 bulldozed the president into stepping down immediately assumed authority, marching into Ravalomanana's city-centre offices.

The opposition said elections would be held within two years. "We can say that we are free. There is a lot of work that awaits us. It is the path Madagascar must take," Rajoelina said.

The army chief of staff had earlier said he favoured Rajoelina (34), a former disc jockey and sacked mayor of Antananarivo, to run the country.

"If we go with the vice-admiral we will throw ourselves into another crisis," Colonel Andre Ndriarijaona told Reuters.

Some dissenting voices in the military had been quashed, diplomatic sources said. The African Union, which opposes any unlawful transfer of power on a continent only too familiar with bloody uprisings, demanded the constitution be respected.

Rajoelina, however, is too young to become president. According to the constitution, the head of the upper house of parliament should become interim leader with elections held within 60 days.

(Additional reporting by Alain Iloniaina in Antananarivo, David Brunnstrom in Brussels, Tsegaye Tadesse in Addis Ababa, Frank Nyakairu and Alison Bevege in Nairobi)
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