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General strike in Madagascar
By Barbara Slaughter
5 February 2002
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The island of Madagascar has entered the second week of a general
strike that began on January 28, with banks, shops, and businesses
closed. Ever since last Monday over half a million people have
demonstrated daily on the streets of the capital Antananarivo
demanding the resignation of President Didier Ratsiraka.
The strikers accuse Ratsiraka of rigging the results of the
December 16 presidential election and are demanding that opposition
leader Marc Ravalomanana, the mayor of Antananarivo, be declared
president.
The daily demonstrations began when the islands High
Constitutional Court announced the result of a re-count. It declared
that Ravalomanana had received 46 percent of the vote, against
40 percent cast for President Ratsiraka, and that neither candidate
had an overall majority. The court ordered a run off second round
of voting to be held within 30 days. This only strengthened the
opposition and led to what the Financial Times described
as daily public demonstrations over the past two weeks not
seen since independence from France in 1960.
Madagascar is a large island in the Indian Ocean off the east
coast of Africa. It has a population of 14 million. It was a French
colonial possession from 1896 until 1960. In 1947, up to 100,000
Malagasy people were killed by the French army when a national
uprising was brutally suppressed.
When independence was granted in 1960 the new government, led
by Philibert Tsiranana, still maintained close economic and political
ties with France. In 1972 students called a general strike demanding
an end to all relations with France and full independence. In
a situation of economic stagnation and falling living standards,
the strike was widely supported by workers, public servants, peasants
and the unemployed. Tsiranana declared a state of emergency and
turned power over to the army to restore law and order.
In 1975 the National Military Directorate selected naval Lieutenant
Didier Ratsiraka as head of state and president of the new ruling
body, the Supreme Revolutionary Council. A year later the Vanguard
of the Malagasy Revolution (Arema) was founded. The party ruled,
with Ratsiraka at its head, for the next 17 years. The government
proclaimed a policy of socialist revolution from above,
which amounted to the state take-over of all the French-held sectors
of the economy.
Within a few years, the highly bureaucratised economy began
to founder and in 1977 the military was again used to stifle dissent.
In 1978 the economic crisis deepened and the national bourgeois
government was forced to accept the free market reforms
demanded by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in exchange
for foreign aid to keep the economy afloat.
In May 1991 there was a general strike against the government.
Three months later hundreds of demonstrators were killed and wounded
when the presidential guard fired into a demonstration outside
the presidential palace. The military did not support Ratsiraka
and he was forced out of office. A transitional government was
established and in 1993 a new president was elected. However,
Ratsiraka was returned to power in the elections of 1996 and two
years later introduced a new constitution that vastly increased
his powers.
The widespread support for the present general strike demonstrates
a confused desire for political and economic change that is being
exploited by right-wing forces. The mass of the population suffers
extreme hardship, in one of the poorest countries in the world,
with 70 percent of the population living below the poverty line.
As well as facing a severe economic crisis, over the past two
years the island has been hit by serious flooding due to tropical
storms and cyclones that have devastated agricultural production.
In reality, there is little to choose between the two main
candidates. Both of them favour a programme of economic
liberalisation and opening up the economy to foreign investment.
Presidential candidate Ravalomanana is a local entrepreneurthe
owner of the countrys largest food company. He rose to political
prominence in the mayoral elections in 1999, when, according to
Africa Confidential he won a surprise victory after a lavish
campaign that included handing out food to the poor in the capital.
In his populist election statements, he promised better living
standards and justice for the people, declaring, This should
be the year of the Great Leap towards Madagascars rapid
development. He is described by the BBC as an ultra-strict
Protestanta member of the Church of Jesus Christ in
Madagascarand is backed by the powerful Madagascar Council
of Christian Churches.
The US has shown an interest in Madagascar in the recent period.
They offered the island the benefits of the African Growth
Opportunity Act, appointed a US defence attaché and
120 Peace Corps workers and donated six US Coast Guard boats.
According to Africa Confidential, there is speculation
that the US is preparing an alternative naval base there, in case
Britain refuses to extend its lease on Diego Garcia in the Chagos
Archipelago, which runs out in 2016.
Both the US and France will be concerned to have a friendly
regime in power on the island. In the past few days France, the
United Nations Security Council and the Organisation of African
Unity have all appealed to Ravalomanana to stand for election
in the second round. He has declared he will not take part in
the run off.
On January 30, Ravalomanana threatened that the strike would
continue until he was declared the outright winner. Twenty-four
hours later he qualified his stance and said, Im not
afraid to take part in a second round on the express condition
that the results will also be scrupulously checked by great powers
and international organisations. He called on workers at
Antananarivos airport to call off their strike action and
allow foreign journalists into the country.
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