Madagascar coup leader Randrianirina sworn in as president

Madagascar's new military ruler, Colonel Michael Randrianirina, speaks after being sworn in as president on Friday taking over from Andry Rajoelina following a coup that ousted him, at the constitutional court in Antanariv , Madagascar, October 17, 2025. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

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Madagascar's coup leader, Colonel Michael Randrianirina, was
sworn in as president on Friday to cheers, blaring trumpets and raised swords,
days after taking control of the island nation in the wake of youth-led
protests that forced out his predecessor.
Ex-leader Andry Rajoelina, whom lawmakers impeached
after he fled abroad at the weekend, has condemned the takeover and refused to
step down while in exile, despite widespread defections in the security forces
and the High Constitutional Court ratifying the army takeover within hours of
it happening.
The African Union and the United Nations Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres have condemned the coup, which came after weeks of "Gen
Z" protests initially triggered by severe, chronic power and water
shortages.
MILITARY-LED
COMMITTEE TO RULE FOR UP TO TWO YEARS
"I will fully, completely, and justly fulfil the high
responsibilities of my position as President of the Republic of
Madagascar," Randrianirina said in a ceremony at the High Constitutional Court,
a colonial-era red-brick building of French windows, segmental arches and stone
balustrades.
"I swear that I will exercise the power entrusted to me
and dedicate all my strength to defending and strengthening national unity and
human rights," he added, before military officers raised swords and blew
trumpets to mark the handover.
Randrianirina has said that a committee led by the military
will rule for up to two years alongside a transitional government before
organising new elections, although analysts doubt this can be guaranteed.
"Whether the military returns power depends less on
words and more on binding safeguards, incentives and oversight,"
Ketakandriana Rafitoson, Malagasy researcher and Vice Chair of Transparency
International, told Reuters from Washington.
"Commitments such as 'We will hand over in two years'
are weak if unaccompanied by mechanisms that limit the junta's capacity to
entrench itself".
While many of the youths cheered the demise of Rajoelina,
who came to office in a 2009 coup, some are already expressing misgivings about
the swiftness with which the army stepped in.
Even Gen Z protesters who turned up to celebrate the new
military leader's inauguration, some wearing the trademark T-shirt depicting a
skull with a straw hat from the Japanese manga series "One Piece",
did not consider their work done.
"Not yet," 18-year-old student Mioty
Andrianambinintsoa said outside the court, as dignitaries draped in the red,
green and white of the Malagasy flag walked past her to waiting jeeps.
"This is a stage. Our aims haven't been achieved."
Asked what those aims were, fellow protester Francko
Ramananvarivo, 23, said: "Our objective is to be led by a government that
is close to the people. We are not there yet."
Randrianirina is a commander in the elite CAPSAT army unit
that played a role in the 2009 coup that brought Rajoelina to power, although
he was not involved in that putsch himself. He broke ranks with the president
during the protests, urging soldiers not to fire on protesters and offering to
protect them.
Underlying Madagascar's periodic upheavals is a young
population - the average age is under 20 - and some of the world's worst
poverty, which blights the lives of three-quarters of its roughly 30 million
people.
Despite exports of prized commodities such as vanilla,
nickel, sapphires and the white pigment ilmenite, the Indian Ocean island's
average income is barely $600 a year, while prices of basic goods such as the
staple rice have spiralled.
Between its independence in 1960 and 2020, GDP per capita plunged by nearly half, according to the World Bank, making it one of the few nations to have become worse off over that period.
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