Madagascar President Dissolves Government After Deadly Protests

Above: Protesters face security forces during a demonstration against repeated water and electricity outages in Antananarivo on September 27, 2025. Image copyright: Rijasolo/Getty Images

The Spin

Madagascar's security forces brutally cracked down on peaceful protests with live ammunition, killing at least 22 people and injuring over a hundred. The Rajoelina government responded to legitimate demonstrations for basic water and electricity services with unnecessary and disproportionate force. A government that shoots its own people cannot be trusted to manage the future of a country, and international human rights law demands an immediate investigation and justice for these shocking killings.

Madagascar faces destabilizing acts resembling a coup attempt disguised as protests, with widespread looting and violence destroying businesses and homes. Anonymous paid groups exploited legitimate concerns to set government buildings on fire and rob banks, necessitating security measures. Rajoelina is doing the right thing by dismissing officials who have failed, while strongly condemning the looting that threatens national stability. Violent protests are no solution and will get Madagascar nowhere.

Metaculus Prediction

There is a 93 percent chance that renewable energy will contribute between 25% and 48% to global electricity production in 2030, according to the Metaculus prediction community.


Articles on this story



© 2025 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 6.15.2

© 2025 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 6.15.2