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France renews ties with Malagasy President Ravalomanana
By Alex Lefebvre
19 May 2003
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The April 29-30 official state visit to Paris by Madagascars
President Marc Ravalomanana has officially ended the chill in
relations between France and its former colony that set in after
Ravalomanana seized power with US backing in 2002.
Ravalomanana declared himself president after disputed elections,
ousting the incumbent, Admiral Didier Ratsiraka, who was favored
by France. Ratsiraka, a friend of both President Jacques Chirac
and former Socialist President François Mitterrand, took
refuge in a wealthy suburb of Paris.
Publicly, Chirac greeted Ravalomanana with unusual solicitude.
He declared it a very, very great pleasure, a great satisfaction
to greet today President Ravalomanana. The French government
also announced financial aid: 50 million euros in debt cancellation
as well as 10 million euros for structural adjustment
(i.e., further privatizations and cuts in public services).
Ravalomanana is working to assume a non-aligned posture. Having
come to power with US backing and coming from a Protestant, anglophone
background, he triggered concerns that the French business community
might be cut out of deals in Madagascar. Important contracts in
the tourist and airline industry have indeed gone to German firms
such as Gato AG and Lufthansa, rather than the traditional French
tourist industry located in Madagascar and Air France.
Ravalomanana also snubbed France by making his initial visits
abroad to Switzerland and Mauritius, where he had found substantial
political and financial support in Malagasy émigré
communities. Traditionally, a Malagasy head of states first
foreign visit is to France.
However, Frances economic weight in Madagascar has precluded
a stronger effort to sideline French interests. France is Madagascars
largest international creditor and dominates both Madagascars
import and export markets: it buys 41 percent of Malagasy exports
(versus 21 percent for the next largest importer from Madagascar,
the US) and provides 38 percent of Malagasy imports (Hong Kong
is a distant second with 10 percent).
Ravalomanana had already made gestures towards France. In October
2002, he participated in the summit of French-speaking countries
held in Beirut. Moreover, an important figure in the previous
Malagasy government, General Jean-Paul Bory, was recently absolved
of corruption charges, easing concerns that a wave of corruption
trials against former government officials undertaken by Ravalomanana
might lead to a trial of Ratsiraka and the exposure of Frances
role in its former colony.
Businessmen and investors have pinned significant hopes on
Ravalomananaa reportedly self-made businessman who acquired
his millions in the dairy industry after starting out as a herdsman
on Madagascars central plateau. Although Ravalomanana and
Ratsiraka had a common economic platform of enacting austerity
measures proposed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Ratsirakas
Arema party was historically associated with the nationalization
of the Malagasy economy carried out in the 1970s. Business circles
clearly hope that Ravalomanana will be able to open up significant
investment opportunities by privatising nationalised firms and
stabilising the political climate in Madagascar.
In addition to Chirac, Ravalomanana and his delegation of top
ministers met with French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin
and a committee from the Medef (Movement of French Enterprises,
the largest political action group for French businesses).
Besides a contingent of top Medef officials, the Medef committee
included representatives from roughly 70 major French firms, including
the banking, tourist, construction, agribusiness and telecom industries.
The discussion centered on guaranteeing that international investors
would have free rein within the country: protecting investments
from nationalisations, speeding up privatisation in nationalised
sectors of the economy, letting foreign investors acquire large
landholdings, and rewriting laws to favor foreign investors. Medef
negotiators explicitly raised concerns that French companies would
be sidelined to give the Malagasy delegation the opportunity to
assuage them.
However, there is no prospect of Ravalomanana setting up a
booming market economy along the lines of international investors
dreams. Not only has he adopted a political platform promising
only more of the social devastation wrought by the IMF throughout
Africa, he has done so in a desperately poor society torn by the
fighting and dislocation surrounding his seizure of power and
beset by growing social and political tensions.
Although few economic statistics are available, the countrys
manufacturing sector is clearly in disarray. According to Pepe
Andrianomanana, an economist in the Malagasy capital of Antananarivo,
There are currently no statistics on how people are coping,
but many people are out of work... Most of the factories that
closed down during the troubles still have not re-opened. Instead
of waiting for these factories to open, some people have found
employment in the informal market. But the meager amount of money
they make doesnt compare to the salaried job.
Severe droughts have decimated crops in southern Madagascar,
where the United Nations World Food Program (WFP) estimates
that roughly 600,000 are threatened with famine, with 30 percent
of children in affected areas already showing signs of significant
to severe malnutrition. The WFPs food stocks have largely
run out, and the limited success of its fundraising efforts mean
that it will concentrate on only 55,000 people most directly threatened
by famine. Increased rice imports, while insufficient to feed
the local population, are large enough to threaten local farmers
with bankruptcy.
The Malagasy newspaper Midi Madigasikara reported that
what food remained in drought-stricken areas was largely beyond
the purchasing power of most local residents. Both the WFP and
Midi Madigasikara have reported mass migrations towards
non-drought-stricken areas.
The spread of chloroquine-resistant malaria, which affects
95 percent of Madagascars territory, home to 90 percent
of its inhabitants, poses a severe health risk. Mortality rates
for malaria patients in Malagasy hospitals are now around 25 percent.
Newer treatments for chloroquine-resistant malaria involving the
drug artemisinine are too expensive for most Malagasy patients
to afford.
Politically, there are signs that Ravalomananas government
and political coalition are beginning to fall apart. LIntelligent
writes, Some who were not rewarded after the latest legislative
elections are frustrated ... Others, most notably inside the government,
rely entirely on the boss, for fear that he could
countermand their slightest decision. Thus one high official nominated
by the Council of Ministers had to await Ravalomananas return
from a foreign tour in order to take charge of his position.
The KMMR (Committee to Elect Marc Ravalomanana), which, together
with Ravalomananas TIM (I love Madagascar) party, made up
the bulk of the pro-Ravalomanana forces, has officially broken
with Ravalomanana and likened him in its speeches to the ousted
Ratsiraka.
See Also:
Madagascar: Ravalomanana
takes control with US support
[9 July 2002]
Secession threatened
in Madagascar
[11 May 2002]
Madagascar: division
between contending rulers threatens increased conflict
[8 April 2002]
Madagascar: Opposition
leader declares himself president
[1 March 2002]
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