Attaboy. That'll show 'em ... | ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - The African Union on Friday suspended Madagascar as the international community stepped up the pressure on the increasingly isolated island nation where the army forced the country's president from power.
So they could install a DJ... | France, the former colonial power and Madagascar's biggest donor, condemned the replacement of the nation's president by an army-backed kid politician as a coup and the United States cut all non-humanitarian aid. It was the first time that France had criticized the change of leadership since new leader Andry Rajoelina took power.
Don't worry, they'll apologize soon ... | After months of street protests, Marc Ravalomanana resigned as Madagascar's president Tuesday and placed power in the hands of the military. Within hours, the military announced it was making opposition leader Rajoelina the country's new president.
The backlash against Madagascar began Thursday when countries in the southern Africa region said they will not recognize Rajoelina. The AU's second most important body, the Peace and Security Council, on Friday gave Madagascar six months to restore a constitutional government, probably through elections, said Bruno Nongoma Zidouemba, the council's temporary chairman.
If it does not comply, the AU will consider imposing sanctions on the Indian Ocean island's leaders, Zidouemba told reporters. "The council is of the opinion that what's occurred in Madagascar entered into the definition of an unconstitutional change of government," said Zidouemba, Burkina Faso's ambassador to the AU.
They threw him out, tanks in the streets, parliament suspended... Kinda looks like a coup, doesn't it? But then, they haven't shot him yet... | French President Nicolas Sarkozy told journalists in Brussels that Madagascar's president had been "toppled" and the new leadership's move to suspend parliament was "not positive."
"I regret what happened in Madagascar," French President Nicolas Sarkozy told journalists in Brussels on Friday. "I hold the new leaders responsible for the physical well-being of the former president (Marc Ravalomanana)," Sarkozy said. "Whatever he did, he must be judged if there is need. But you don't take care of business like this." He said that he was not defending Ravalomanana, about whom, "many things can be said."
One of the things that can be said is that he was president and now he's not. |
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