Curfew declared in Madagascar capital after violent protests

Protesters erect a barricade during a demonstration to denounce frequent power outages and water shortages in Antananarivo, Madagascar September 25, 2025. REUTERS/Zo Andrianjafy

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Authorities in Madagascar on Thursday imposed a dusk-to-dawn
curfew in the capital, after protests over frequent power outages and water
shortages turned violent, according to a top security official.
Police fired teargas to disperse the thousands of mostly
youth protesters who were marching and carrying placards in Antananarivo, the
capital, according to a Reuters witness.
The demonstrators were denouncing the government and
demanding restoration of reliable water and electricity across the country.
"There are, unfortunately, individuals taking advantage
of the situation to destroy other people's property," General Angelo
Ravelonarivo, who heads a joint security body that includes the police and the
military, said in a statement he read on privately owned Real TV late on
Thursday.
To protect "the population and their belongings,"
the security forces decided to impose a curfew from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m.
"until public order is restored," the statement said.
Madagascar, an island nation in the Indian Ocean, is mired
in poverty, and some people blame the government of President Andry Rajoelina,
who was re-elected in 2023, for not improving conditions.
During the protests earlier on Thursday, a large shopping
mall in the capital was looted and then burned, and the homes of two lawmakers
were looted and vandalised, according to the Reuters witness.
The protesters, who defied an earlier police ban on the
demonstration, marched while chanting, "We need water, we need
electricity."
After the protests were dispersed, they later spread into
various neighbourhoods of the capital.
A security forces spokesperson, Zafisambatra Ravoavy, could
not be reached for comment.
On Wednesday, the national police chief, Jean Herbert
Andriantahiana Rakotomalala, warned that security forces would "take firm
preventive...measures against those tempted to break the law."
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