ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar
Madagascar's outgoing president Andry Rajoelina launched his re-election campaign on Tuesday, promising "an orange wave" to thousands of supporters wearing his party colour who gathered in the capital, Antananarivo.
Voters in the Indian Ocean
Island nation will elect a president on November 9 but the run-up to the poll
has been marred by tensions after disputes over its regularity.
For more than a week,
opposition parties have held demonstrations against what they call an
"institutional coup" to keep Rajoelina in power that have routinely
been dispersed by police.
"Go to your towns, your
districts, go throughout Madagascar to create an orange wave," Rajoelina,
sporting orange trousers, sunglasses and a white shirt said, from a stage set
up in a pine forest in the suburb of Akamasoa.
"No one will take the
victory away from us," he told the crowd, which included rich, SUV-driving
Malagasy as well as poor people living off scraps from a nearby dump.
The rally marked the start of
the campaign period, but 11 of the 13 candidates in the running said on Monday
they would abstain from campaigning in protest until their grievances are
addressed.
Rajoelina, 49, resigned last
month in line with the constitution in order to run for re-election.
The president of the Senate,
Herimanana Razafimahefa, was supposed to take over but declined for
"personal reasons", leaving the task to a "collegial
government" headed by the prime minister, an ally of Rajoelina.
The move was accepted by the
country's top court, which also dismissed appeals to have Rajoelina's candidacy
declared void over his dual French nationality, sparking the anger of the
opposition.
The 11 opposition candidates
have since led almost daily, unauthorised marches in the capital, which have
been met with a heavy police presence and tear gas.
Presidential hopeful Andry
Raobelina, who was injured at a rally last week and later sought medical
attention on the nearby island of Mauritius, has since filed a court appeal to
have the elections postponed, citing "force majeure".
In another development on
Tuesday, Razafimahefa sent a letter to the Constitutional Court walking back on
his decision to turn down the caretaker role.
"I am determined to
assume my responsibilities," he told journalists, citing the "spectre
of a political crisis" threatening Madagascar.
Rajoelina first took power in
2009 on the back of a coup.
After not running in the 2013
election due to international pressure, he was voted back into power in 2018.
He has since held the reins in
a country that remains among the poorest in the world despite vast natural
resources.
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