ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar
Six prominent presidential candidates in Madagascar told AFP on Monday they plan to boycott this week's elections, worsening a political crisis engulfing the country.
The six, who are part of a
larger grouping of opposition candidates holding almost daily protests for
weeks, said they will not take part in Thursday's vote and will urge their
supporters not to cast their ballot.
"We will call (on people)
not to go and vote," said presidential hopeful Marc Ravalomanana, 73, one
of two former presidents to join calls for a boycott.
The Indian Ocean Island nation
has been shaken by a fierce battle between President Andry Rajoelina, who is
running for re-election, and most opposition leaders.
Almost all the 12 opposition
candidates in the running have led near daily, unauthorised marches in
Antananarivo, for more than a month, protesting at what they have called an
"institutional coup" that favors the incumbent.
The demonstrations that have
in average drawn a few hundred supporters have been regularly dispersed by
police.
On Saturday security forces
fired teargas and detained 11 protesters at yet another rally.
"I will not stand for
election, that is very clear," said Hery Rajaonarimampianina, 65, another
former president who was in the running to replace Rajoelina.
Last week, the head of the
lower house of parliament, who leads a mediation group to find a way out of the
crisis, called for the suspension of the presidential elections, to ensure
"peace" and "harmony."
"The situation is
deleterious. There is no calm, it is not the time to hold elections," said
candidate Auguste Paraina, 69. The opposition grouping supports a suspension of
the electoral process.
But a spokeswoman for
Rajoelina called the request a "far-fetched idea."
The outgoing president held
his last campaign rally in Antananarivo on Sunday in front of a fervent crowd
of several thousand people donning t-shirts bearing his image.
"I'm going to win, that's
for sure, and in the first round," he told AFP in an interview at the
weekend.
Rajoelina, 49, became Africa's
youngest head of state in 2009 when he took power 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
and has since held the reins in a country that remains among the poorest in the
world despite vast natural resources.
The show of support for the
president at the weekend "means nothing" said Roland Ratsiraka, 57,
another opposition candidate, hinting at the common practice of paying people
to attend political rallies in the country.
The European Union, the United
States and other members of the international community have expressed
"deep concern" at the political tensions and denounced the excessive
use of force against the opposition.
A source at Madagascar's
electoral commission said some irregularities have already been reported,
including some would-be voters being pressured not to register.
The crisis erupted in
September after Rajoelina resigned in line with the constitution in order to
run for re-election.
The president of the Senate
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
Constitutional Court, which also dismissed appeals to have Rajoelina's
candidacy declared void over his dual French nationality, sparking opposition
anger.
Detractors believe that under
local laws the President was to lose Madagascan nationality and with it the
ability to lead the country because of the naturalisation, which was revealed
by the media in June.
In Itaosy, an eastern suburb
of Antananarivo, a few hundred people joined a peaceful opposition march on
Monday.
"It's a rigged
vote," said Sandra Rafarasoa, 33, standing outside her modest repair shop
for two-wheelers.
Voters in Madagascar were
initially due to head to the polls on November 9, but the top court in October
ordered that the elections be postponed after a presidential candidate was
injured during a demonstration.
The date for a potential
second round vote on December 20 was kept unchanged.
Thursday's election "will
not take place", said Hajo Andrianainarivelo, 56, another opposition
candidate.
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