Berliner Boersenzeitung - Low turnout in boycott-hit Madagascar presidential election

EUR -
AED 3.979819
AFN 76.399286
ALL 100.72543
AMD 436.820723
ANG 1.95409
AOA 901.598951
ARS 392.86133
AUD 1.632917
AWG 1.950575
AZN 1.852265
BAM 1.95098
BBD 2.189191
BDT 119.266422
BGN 1.951368
BHD 0.408403
BIF 3088.409794
BMD 1.083653
BND 1.447537
BOB 7.49149
BRL 5.32106
BSD 1.084221
BTN 90.40164
BWP 14.691633
BYN 3.572009
BYR 21239.590163
BZD 2.18549
CAD 1.466789
CDF 2893.352544
CHF 0.944701
CLF 0.033775
CLP 931.9413
CNY 7.733164
COP 4343.073564
CRC 573.782324
CUC 1.083653
CUP 28.716793
CVE 109.978515
CZK 24.394972
DJF 193.042149
DKK 7.455852
DOP 61.605527
DZD 145.805287
EGP 33.484214
ERN 16.254788
ETB 60.36169
FJD 2.413508
FKP 0.85317
GBP 0.857863
GEL 2.92043
GGP 0.85317
GHS 13.014448
GIP 0.85317
GMD 73.011112
GNF 9324.830222
GTQ 8.493094
GYD 227.019091
HKD 8.470852
HNL 26.766707
HRK 7.630615
HTG 143.40568
HUF 379.560227
IDR 16787.566171
ILS 4.03349
IMP 0.85317
INR 90.379387
IQD 1419.584853
IRR 45797.865408
ISK 150.681755
JEP 0.85317
JMD 168.215932
JOD 0.768852
JPY 158.824464
KES 166.069576
KGS 96.771884
KHR 4463.564377
KMF 490.298658
KPW 975.287196
KRW 1413.982114
KWD 0.334697
KYD 0.903563
KZT 501.042798
LAK 22431.607869
LBP 16367.272734
LKR 355.824844
LRD 203.889325
LSL 20.166946
LTL 3.199745
LVL 0.655491
LYD 5.22015
MAD 10.923759
MDL 19.228491
MGA 4876.436357
MKD 61.458152
MMK 2276.86392
MNT 3719.389999
MOP 8.728833
MRO 386.863777
MUR 47.919125
MVR 16.644837
MWK 1825.393673
MXN 18.756185
MYR 5.063909
MZN 68.54097
NAD 20.166831
NGN 865.837958
NIO 39.840506
NOK 11.734439
NPR 144.642623
NZD 1.753214
OMR 0.417182
PAB 1.084216
PEN 4.050031
PGK 4.046246
PHP 59.971468
PKR 304.669049
PLN 4.33255
PYG 8044.198982
QAR 3.945308
RON 4.967026
RSD 117.304738
RUB 98.664941
RWF 1349.060576
SAR 4.064878
SBD 9.18498
SCR 14.150003
SDG 651.274973
SEK 11.303883
SGD 1.448399
SHP 1.318535
SLE 24.636858
SLL 21402.137665
SOS 619.307232
SRD 40.749955
STD 22429.420092
SYP 14089.632475
SZL 20.166682
THB 37.979318
TJS 11.845079
TMT 3.80362
TND 3.373431
TOP 2.555361
TRY 31.315072
TTD 7.350838
TWD 34.040235
TZS 2714.548575
UAH 39.64666
UGX 4114.833252
USD 1.083653
UYU 42.435544
UZS 13334.344392
VEF 3850883.719781
VES 38.508839
VND 26321.920666
VUV 128.670426
WST 2.907556
XAF 654.337273
XAG 0.043405
XAU 0.000528
XCD 2.928626
XDR 0.813797
XOF 651.275517
XPF 119.039577
YER 271.292604
ZAR 20.309056
ZMK 9754.176594
ZMW 25.831177
ZWL 348.935682
  • CMSC

    -0.1900

    24.42

    -0.78%

  • RBGPF

    1.6980

    69.708

    +2.44%

  • AZN

    0.1500

    64.94

    +0.23%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    12.5

    +0.32%

  • RIO

    -1.8450

    69.315

    -2.66%

  • GSK

    0.1100

    36.68

    +0.3%

  • NGG

    -0.3200

    66.52

    -0.48%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    40.56

    +0.62%

  • BTI

    -0.1050

    31.935

    -0.33%

  • SCU

    -0.0300

    12.72

    -0.24%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    3.64

    +3.02%

  • CMSD

    -0.2540

    24.076

    -1.05%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    11.3

    +0.18%

  • RELX

    -0.0550

    38.505

    -0.14%

  • SLAC

    -0.0300

    10.31

    -0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.1350

    9.085

    -1.49%

  • BP

    -0.3950

    35.585

    -1.11%

  • BCC

    0.7350

    113.125

    +0.65%

Low turnout in boycott-hit Madagascar presidential election
Low turnout in boycott-hit Madagascar presidential election / Photo: RIJASOLO - AFP

Low turnout in boycott-hit Madagascar presidential election

Madagascar voted in highly contested presidential elections Thursday that were boycotted by most opposition candidates, resulting in a low turnout.

Text size:

After polling stations closed and counting started, the electoral commission, which the opposition accuses of lacking impartiality, estimated 39 percent of the 11 million people who were registered to vote did so.

Two senior sources at the electoral commission speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, had put the figure at less than 20 percent.

President Andry Rajoelina has voiced confidence in being re-elected, brushing off weeks of protests that have rocked the Indian Ocean island nation.

But most opposition candidates disowned the vote.

"We do not recognise these elections and the Malagasy population in its great majority does not recognise them either," Hajo Andrianainarivelo, 56, told a press conference in the capital Antananarivo, speaking on behalf of 10 of 12 opposition candidates.

"The elections did not respect the required democratic standards and this was proven by the participation rate, which was the lowest in Madagascar's electoral history."

The opposition grouping had urged voters to shun the ballot, complaining of an "institutional coup" in favour of Rajoelina, 49.

"There are always people trying to stir up trouble and prevent elections in Madagascar," Rajoelina said after voting in Antananarivo.

"I'm confident in the maturity of Malagasy democracy, and I'm also confident in the choice of the Malagasy people."

A poor turnout is likely to strengthen the opposition, which has vowed to continue protesting until a fair election is held.

Turnout in the first round of the last elections in 2018 was about 55 percent.

- 'Turn the page' -

Voting passed off calmly in the capital, AFP journalists saw, with voters emerging from rudimentary polling centres, their thumbs stained with green and gold indelible ink.

"I'm voting, but we know this isn't normal," said 43-year-old Eugene Rakatomalala. "There weren't any candidates who did campaigns."

Madagascar is the leading global producer of vanilla but also one of the world's poorest countries and has been shaken by successive crises since independence from France in 1960.

"We have to move on, turn the page. For 60 years that was already the case, and I think we have to stop now," computer science student Francky Randriananantoandro told AFP.

From October, the opposition grouping, including two former presidents, has led near-daily, largely unauthorised protest marches.

Police have regularly dispersed them, firing tear gas.

Rajoelina first took power in 2009 on the back of a coup, then skipped the following elections only to make a winning comeback in 2018.

As his opponents refused to campaign, he flew across the country by private plane, showcasing infrastructure built during his tenure.

Still, many seemed to have stayed away on Thursday.

- Voting 'for a better life' -

Two hours before polls closed, at a polling station in an opposition stronghold in Antananarivo, an election official yawned. Another sat with his head resting on his hands.

Only 18 percent of those registered there had shown up. "It's really not much," said one official.

At another polling station in a poor district of the capital, officials told an AFP reporter during the afternoon that turnout was around 30 percent.

For many, politics takes a back seat to making ends meet.

"In the morning, I don't eat -- only a little at lunchtime and in the evening. Otherwise, I can't get by, I don't have enough," Josiane Rasomalala, 41, told AFP.

"I'm voting because we need a better life."

Madagascar has been in turmoil since media reports in June revealed Rajoelina had acquired French nationality in 2014.

Under local law, the president should have lost his Madagascan nationality, and with it, the ability to lead the country, his opponents said.

Rajoelina denied trying to conceal his naturalisation, saying he became French to allow his children to study abroad.

His critics were further enraged by another ruling allowing for a presidential ally to take over on an interim basis after Rajoelina resigned under the constitution to run for re-election.

They have also complained about electoral irregularities.

In Androy, southern Madagascar, "The polling stations are literally closed, there are no voters," said Siteny Randrianasoloniaiko, one of two opposition candidates not taking part in the boycott.

Results should be announced on November 24.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)