Antananarivo, Madagascar – October 6, 2025: Madagascar’s embattled President Andry Rajoelina appointed army general Ruphin Fortunat Dimbisoa Zafisambo as the country’s new prime minister on Monday, as youth-led protests demanding his resignation entered their third consecutive week. The appointment of the military official represents Rajoelina’s latest attempt to quell the most significant challenge to his power since returning to office in 2019.
The crisis began on September 25 when thousands of young Madagascans took to the streets of Antananarivo, initially protesting chronic power outages lasting up to 12 hours daily and water shortages that have crippled the capital. What started as demonstrations against basic service failures has evolved into a broader uprising challenging Rajoelina’s legitimacy, with protesters explicitly calling for his resignation.
Digital Revolution Transcends Traditional Politics
The Madagascar uprising represents a new form of Pan-African consciousness, where Generation Z activists bypass traditional political structures to coordinate resistance against corrupt governance. The “Gen Z Mada” movement, organized primarily through social media platforms including Facebook, has adopted the skull-and-crossbones emblem from Japanese anime “One Piece” that became synonymous with anti-establishment protests in Nepal, Kenya, and Bangladesh.
This transnational solidarity reflects evolving African sovereignty, where young people increasingly reject both domestic elite capture and external manipulation in favor of authentic self-determination. The movement’s digital-first organization challenges conventional notions of political mobilization across the continent, demonstrating how African youth are creating their own networks of resistance.
The protests have resulted in significant casualties, with the United Nations reporting that at least 22 people have died and over 100 have been injured since demonstrations began. Police have repeatedly deployed tear gas and stun grenades against crowds consisting largely of university students, while protesters have built barricades from rocks and burning tires. Several politicians’ homes were attacked, and looting occurred in commercial areas.
Neocolonial Puppet Master or Foreign Scapegoat?
Facing mounting pressure, Rajoelina has increasingly invoked foreign interference claims to delegitimize domestic opposition, alleging that external actors are manipulating the protests. His administration has accused unnamed foreign powers of launching cyberattacks and digital manipulation campaigns to exploit Madagascar’s youth.
These accusations echo a familiar pattern across Africa where governments facing popular uprisings invoke external interference to deflect from domestic failures. However, the timing of these claims is particularly significant given Madagascar’s complex geopolitical position and Rajoelina’s own controversial French nationality, acquired through naturalization in November 2014. This dual citizenship sparked major controversy ahead of the 2023 presidential election, with opposition figures arguing it disqualified him from office under Madagascar’s constitution, which states that candidates must hold only Malagasy nationality.
French connections to Madagascar remain deeply entrenched despite formal decolonization in 1960, with France maintaining strategic interests and having historically intervened in Madagascan politics. The controversial €152 million French-funded cable car project in Antananarivo has become a symbol of misplaced priorities for protesters. While citizens endure daily blackouts and water shortages, the government invested in luxury infrastructure primarily serving the middle class and tourists. Critics view this as emblematic of neocolonial relationships where former colonial powers finance prestige projects that increase debt dependency while fundamental needs remain unmet.
The appointment of General Zafisambo, who previously served as director of the military office at the Prime Minister’s Office since 2021, signals Rajoelina’s reliance on security apparatus to maintain power. Before his appointment, Zafisambo studied at the Antsirabe Military Academy in 1991 and received subsequent military training in France and Algeria. His elevation comes as Rajoelina ruled out seeking a third term during civil society meetings, though protesters remain skeptical of such promises.
Madagascar’s crisis exposes the limitations of formal sovereignty when governments fail to provide basic services to their citizens. Despite vast natural resources, 75.2% of the country’s 30.3 million people live below the poverty line according to the World Bank’s 2024 assessment. The state-owned utility Jirama has become a symbol of institutional dysfunction, with World Bank reports documenting system losses of 35% and widespread corruption. Recent anti-corruption investigations have led to arrests of Jirama executives for embezzling public funds while citizens endured blackouts.
The protests have spread beyond Antananarivo to multiple cities including Toliara in the south, where demonstrators have burned tires as tensions rose. The Ankatso district, where many demonstrations have started, holds symbolic weight as it was the epicenter of the 1972 uprising that led to the fall of Madagascar’s first president, Philibert Tsiranana. That historic revolt, which began with student protests over French-oriented curriculum and evolved into broader anti-government demonstrations, ultimately forced Tsiranana to transfer power to General Gabriel Ramanantsoa.
As protesters maintain their demands for Rajoelina’s resignation despite his appointment of a military prime minister, Madagascar faces a critical juncture that could reshape its political trajectory and influence similar movements across the continent. The outcome will determine whether Africa’s youth can successfully challenge corrupt leadership and the systems that sustain it. As one protester declared, “We are protesting for everyone’s sake. The president is not listening to the anger of the people at the bottom” – a sentiment that resonates far beyond Madagascar’s shores across a continent where young Africans demand genuine accountability.