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Madagascar military unit seizes power after president impeached
Madagascar military unit seizes power after president impeached
by AFP Staff Writers
Antananarivo, Madagascar (AFP) Oct 14, 2025

An elite military unit told AFP Tuesday it had taken power in Madagascar after the national assembly voted to impeach President Andry Rajoelina for desertion of duty.

The 51-year-old president had refused growing demands to step down, going into hiding after weeks of anti-government street demonstrations in the island nation.

"We have taken power," Colonel Michael Randrianirina, head of the CAPSAT military unit, told AFP after reading out a statement at a government building in the capital.

The unit will set up a committee composed of officers from the army, gendarmerie and national police, he said.

CAPSAT played a major role in the 2009 coup that first brought Rajoelina to power.

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

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

The announcement came minutes after the lower house of parliament voted to impeach Rajoelina in a session dismissed by the presidency as "devoid of any legal basis".

Just hours earlier, Rajoelina had dissolved the national assembly by decree to block the session.

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

The High Constitutional Court has to validate the vote.

Rajoelina, a former mayor of the capital Antananarivo, said late Monday he was sheltering in a "safe space" after attempts on his life, without revealing his location.

The protests began on September 25 and reached a pivotal point at the weekend when mutinous soldiers and security forces, including CAPSAT, joined the demonstrators and called for the president and other government ministers to step down.

Madagascar, a history marked by deadly violence
Antananarivo, Madagascar (AFP) Oct 14, 2025 - Madagascar, where the military said it seized power from impeached President Andry Rajoelina on Tuesday, has a recent history marked by deadly unrest.

The Indian Ocean island is one of the world's poorest countries despite natural resources in farming, forestry, fishing and minerals.

Over the decades, sociopolitical upheaval there has been often deadly for citizens and occasionally fatal to the ruling power.

- 1947 -

A nationalist insurrection is repressed by French colonial forces, causing tens of thousands of deaths over more than a year.

- 1960 -

Madagascar achieves independence from France as a republic under the island's first president, Philibert Tsiranana.

- 1972 -

The government collapses following a violently repressed student uprising in Antananarivo province. Tsiranana is forced to cede power to the military.

- 1975 -

Tsiranana is succeeded by Didier Ratsiraka, whose leadership is marked by protests and crackdowns over the following years.

- 1991 -

A new wave of popular discontent erupts. Ratsiraka eventually leaves office but is re-elected in 1996.

- 2001 -

Months of protests and armed clashes erupt between factions for Ratsiraka and his rival, millionaire Marc Ravalomanana, after a disputed election.

Ravalomanana is eventually declared the winner and succeeds his opponent in 2002. He is re-elected in 2006.

- 2009 -

Andry Rajoelina, then mayor of Antananarivo and an opponent of the government, gathers 20,000 supporters in the capital for protests, marred by violence. The military hands power to Rajoelina.

- 2018 -

Opposition supporters occupy Antananarivo, denouncing new electoral laws and demanding the resignation of the president, whom they accuse of authoritarian tendencies.

The crisis ends with the appointment of a national unity government.

- 2023 -

Protests multiply in the lead-up to a presidential election, over reports that Rajoelina had obtained French citizenship. Attempts to invalidate his candidacy are dismissed.

The crisis escalates and a curfew is imposed in the capital on the eve of the first round of voting, which the opposition boycotts.

On December 16, Rajoelina is reappointed president.

- 2025 -

Street protests erupt in September and October over power and water shortages, growing into wider calls for Rajoelina and other government ministers to step down.

The president sacks his government and appoints a general as prime minister, but protesters persist and win the support of the elite military unit CAPSAT.

Rajoelina, in hiding, alleges an illegal power-grab.

The National Assembly impeaches Rajoelina. CAPSAT announces it is taking power and promises to set up a civilian government.

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