Madagascar protesters demand president’s resignation in fifth day of rallies

Demonstrators protesting against chronic electricity and water cuts confront riot police in Antananarivo, Madagascar, Sept. 30, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 01 October 2025
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Madagascar protesters demand president’s resignation in fifth day of rallies

  • The protests initially started in Antananarivo last week over nationwide water shortages and power blackouts
  • Opposition leader Rivo Rakotovao said the main opposition parties’ alliance Firaisankina would not join any new government with Rajoelina in power

ANTANANARIVO: Hundreds of protesters across Madagascar demanded the resignation of President Andry Rajoelina on Wednesday, taking to the streets for a fifth day of demonstrations that have shaken the government, local television broadcasts showed.
Spurred by the so-called youth-led “Gen Z” protests in Kenya and Nepal, the demonstrations have been the largest the Indian Ocean island has seen in years, and the most serious challenge Rajoelina has faced since his re-election in 2023.
The protests initially started in Antananarivo last week over nationwide water shortages and power blackouts but have since spread across the island, prompting Rajoelina to dissolve the government late on Monday.
His move failed to assuage public anger. A message on the protest movement’s Facebook page called for Rajoelina’s resignation as well as the dissolution of the election commission, the senate and the country’s top court.

PROTESTERS CHANT ‘RAJOELINA OUT’
The United Nations says at least 22 people have been killed and more than 100 injured since the protests started last week, figures the government rejects.
On Wednesday, protesters took to the streets in the capital and towns including Toliara, 925 km (575 miles) south of Antananarivo, chanting “get out” and waving flags and banners with the words “Rajoelina Out,” footage broadcast by privately-owned Radio Télévision Siteny showed.
They were escorted by security forces in vehicles, and other protesters in rickshaws, the footage showed.
A government spokesperson did not respond to Reuters requests for comment, however the president’s spokesperson Lova Ranoromaro said on social media that property had been destroyed and homes looted.
“We do not want a coup d’etat, because a coup d’etat destroys a nation, because a coup d’etat destroys the future of our children,” Ranoromaro wrote on her personal Facebook account.
Opposition leader Rivo Rakotovao said the main opposition parties’ alliance Firaisankina would not join any new government with Rajoelina in power, and called on him to step down.
“We fully support this action to rescue the Malagasy people and rebuild the nation, led by the Malagasy people and driven by the youth,” Rakotovao told a news conference.
Rajoelina first came to power in a 2009 coup. He stepped down in 2014 but became president again after winning the 2018 election, and secured a third term in a December 2023 poll that his challengers said was marred by irregularities.
In a message from the Vatican, Pope Leo said he was saddened by the violent clashes in the predominantly Christian nation.
“Let us pray to the Lord that every form of violence may always be avoided and that the constant pursuit of social harmony may be fostered through the promotion of justice and the common good,” he said in his weekly address.


‘Racist’ system sees Muslim, Arab Britons stripped of citizenship at record rates: Report

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‘Racist’ system sees Muslim, Arab Britons stripped of citizenship at record rates: Report

  • Vast majority are Muslim with Middle Eastern, South Asian or North African heritage
  • People of color targeted at a rate 12 times higher than their white British peers

LONDON: A “racist two-tier system” is resulting in the UK stripping British Muslims of citizenship at record rates, a new report has found.

Published by the Runnymede Trust and Reprieve, the report found that the UK is the only G20 country to strip citizenship en masse, having done so more than 200 times since 2010.

This has taken place on the grounds of “public good,” and has mainly targeted those now detained in Syrian detention centers following the collapse of Daesh.

Compared to Britain, the French government only resorted to the citizenship-stripping measure 16 times between 2002 and 2020.

The report condemned the “secretive” system that allows Britons with dual nationality, or naturalized citizens, to be deprived of their citizenship.

Many have only been vaguely informed of the evidence relating to their individual decision, and the government is not required to inform them that their citizenship has been stripped.

The most high-profile case is that of Shamima Begum, who left London to live in Daesh-held territory as a teenager.

UN experts believe that she was trafficked to Syria, and since having her citizenship stripped, she has resided in a detention center in the country.

The report highlighted the “shocking” racial disparity of existing cases of citizenship stripping, which targeted people of color at a rate 12 times higher than their white British peers.

A Home Office spokesperson described the report as “scaremongering and wrong,” adding that the system is used to “protect the British public from some of the most dangerous people, including terrorists and serious organised criminals.”

The vast majority of former British citizens who were stripped of their citizenship are Muslim with Middle Eastern, South Asian or North African heritage.

The practice of stripping citizenship was previously taboo in the West, after the Nazi government in the Second World War conducted mass removals of the status of German Jews.

From 1973 to 2002 in the UK, no stripping of citizenship took place except in response to cases of fraud, the report found.

Imran, whose sister was stripped of her citizenship, told The Independent: “You’ve got secret courts ... where you’re not allowed to be present. And you’re not allowed to understand what’s being discussed.”

The Runnymede and Reprieve report urged the government to immediately end the practice. The laws that grant the home secretary the power to deprive citizenship should also be abolished, it said.

MP Andrew Mitchell of the opposition Conservative Party told The Independent: “I don’t think it’s for a ‘here today, gone tomorrow’ politician to be able, at the stroke of a pen, to remove someone’s citizenship, much less stick it in a drawer in the Home Office without informing them.”

Labour peer Alf Dubs, who fled Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia as a child, described the system as “absolutely outrageous” and urged the government to change course.