- Reaction score
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- 410
Madagascar army issues ultimatum
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2009/03/200931014945459539.html
http://www.france24.com
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2009/03/200931014945459539.html
Madagascar's army has called on the country's feuding political leaders to resolve their disputes within 72 hours, or face intervention from the military.
Edmond Rasolomahandry, the army's chief of staff, on Tuesday urged political groups and leaders across Madagascan society, as well as foreign envoys, to work for a solution to Madagascar's three-month long political crisis.
"We implore all political players, civil society organisations and other parties to reunite immediately and to find a solution," he said.
"If no solution is found within this time, we, the armed forces, will fulfil our responsibilities in the greater interests of the nation," said the army chief, without elaborating.
More than 100 people have been killed, the majority at the hands of the security forces, in a wave of opposition protests against the rule of Marc Ravalomanana, Madagascar's president, since the start of the year.
Military concerns
Army officers have expressed increasing unhappiness with the government's use of troops to suppress the protests, led by Andry Rajoelina, the opposition leader who has accused Ravalomanana of running a dictatorship while his people starve.
The army has already compelled Mamy Ranaivoniarivo, the defence minister, to resign, accusing him of "violence against the population" after he ordered soldiers to put down anti-government protests.
Soldiers at Camp Capsat, an army base located on the outskirts of Antananarivo, the Madagascan capital, have now refused to suppress anti-government protests.
Rasolofomahandry has vowed the army will "not take sides".
Mistakes admitted
Meanwhile, the president admitted on state television that he had "made mistakes" in his handling of the country's political crisis.
"This political crisis has to stop. I am ready to listen. I am human and I made mistakes," Ravalomanana said.
He called for a two-day national conference to try to bridge the divide between his government and the opposition.
There were further protests on Tuesday, with hundreds of pro-government protesters massing outside the French embassy, after France said it was sheltering opposition leader Rajoelina.
UN protection
"He has been at the French residence since Friday night, following a request from the international community and the UN mediator," a French diplomat said, adding that the move had been agreed with Ravalomanana.
A diplomatic source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Rajoelina had left the embassy to hold meetings "in town", and that he was likely to head to the US embassy next.
Rajoelina, whose criticism of the government's economic and social policies has struck a chord with large portions of the population - more than half of Madagascar's 20 million people survive on less than $1 a day - is now under UN protection, saying he fears he will be arrested.
Drame Tiebile, a UN mediator who earlier confirmed that Rajoelina was under UN protection, said that he had been assured by Ravalomanana that the opposition leader would not be arrested.
In a further sign of the diplomatic fallout from the crisis, the US state department said it had "authorised the departure of non-emergency personnel and family members" from the US embassy in Antananarivo.
http://www.france24.com
AFP - Soldiers at a large military base on the outskirts of the Madagascan capital mutinied Sunday in protest at the government's repression of a three-month-old opposition movement.
Access roads to the camp in Soanierana district, around six kilometres (four miles) from the city centre, were blocked by mutineering soldiers.
"We no longer take orders from our hierarchy, we are following our hearts. We were trained to protect property and citizens, not to fire at people. We are with the people," said one of them, on condition of anonymity.
Security forces had foiled several opposition rallies in Antananarivo and other towns since Wednesday, leading to clashes that left at least four people dead.
An AFP reporter was able to access one wing of the military compound, where soldiers who refused to be quoted confirmed that the base was rebelling in protest at the regime's repression of opposition demonstrations.
"The army chief of staff came this morning in an attempt to sweet-talk us but he quickly had to get back in his car and leave," said one of them.
Several witnesses observed soldiers deploying around the base, apparently bracing for retaliation by the presidential guard, but no shots are reported to have been fired since the mutiny started on Sunday.
Madagascar has a long history of political instability but until now, the Indian Ocean island's military has been reputed for its loyalist tradition.
No official comment was immediately available but the renewed tension comes after opposition leader Andry Rajoelina was forced into hiding following a botched arrest attempt at his residence.
On Saturday, Rajoelina, who late last year mounted a fierce challenge against the regime of President Marc Ravalomanana, told AFP that he could no longer risk appearing in public.
"I am now hiding in a safe location where I cannot be attacked... Until the dust settles, I can no longer physically appear in front of my supporters," said Rajoelina, who had been leading almost daily protests in central Antananarivo.
The 34-year-old opposition leader did not specify whether he was still in the capital Antananarivo or even in the country.
According to several officials and witnesses, security forces on Saturday also stormed the offices of Rajoelina's Viva television network and confiscated equipment.
The opposition leader describes Ravalomanana as a dictator starving his people and late last year mounted a fierce political challenge against the president, who has been in power since 2002.
Rajoelina last week walked out on direct talks with Ravalomanana, accusing his rival of playing down his camp's grievances and pledging to revert to mass street action to unseat the president.
On Saturday, he called for a broad forum representing all sectors of the population to be formed in order to reach a decision on the main sticking points that have derailed talks between the rival political camps.
The United Nations and African Union have dispatched envoys in a bid to defuse the crisis and prevent a resumption of violent clashes that before the weekend clashes, had already killed close to 100 since the start of the year.
Madagascar is one of the world's poorest countries and Rajoelina's criticism of the regime's economic and social policies has struck a chord with large portions of the population.