Madagascar’s Gen Z Revolt Exposes Deeper Battle for African Sovereignty

Madagascar Protests

Antananarivo, Madagascar – October 5, 2025: Madagascar’s youth-led uprising has erupted into the most serious challenge to President Andry Rajoelina’s administration since 2018, as Generation Z protesters demand not just water and electricity, but fundamental political transformation on the island nation. What began as frustration over basic services has evolved into a powerful movement that threatens the stability of one of Africa’s most resource-rich yet impoverished countries.

The protests, which started on September 25 and have spread across nine cities, represent far more than domestic discontent. They illuminate broader struggles across the African continent where young people are rejecting decades of neocolonial governance structures and demanding genuine sovereignty.

France’s Shadow Looms Over Madagascar’s Crisis

As Rajoelina dismissed his entire government on Monday and accused foreign powers of orchestrating a “coup attempt,” the protests have exposed Madagascar’s complex relationship with former colonial master France. The president’s claims of external manipulation come amid ongoing tensions over the disputed Scattered Islands, which France continues to control despite United Nations resolutions calling for their return to Madagascar.

Madagascar’s Foreign Minister Rasata Rafaravavitafika has alleged that the country faces a “massive digital manipulation campaign” originating from abroad, specifically citing “an agency with advanced technological capabilities”. These accusations echo similar claims across Francophone Africa, where governments frequently blame foreign interference when faced with popular uprisings against their rule.

The timing is particularly significant given France’s recent efforts to rebuild influence across Africa. President Emmanuel Macron’s April 2025 visit to Madagascar—the first by a French leader in 20 years—included promises to return colonial-era artifacts and address territorial disputes, while simultaneously securing new economic partnerships in energy and mining.

China’s growing economic presence in Madagascar adds another layer of complexity. As Madagascar’s largest trading partner since 2018, China has invested heavily in infrastructure, agriculture, and mining sectors. The competition between French neocolonial interests and Chinese economic expansion creates a geopolitical backdrop that the Gen Z protesters are keenly aware of, as they demand true sovereignty over their nation’s resources.

Regional Solidarity and Pan-African Awakening

The Madagascar protests are part of a broader African youth awakening that transcends borders. Drawing inspiration from successful Gen Z movements in Kenya, Nepal, and Morocco, Malagasy protesters have adopted symbols and tactics from these international struggles, including the use of the “One Piece” anime flag that has become synonymous with youth resistance across Asia and Africa.

This transnational solidarity reflects a new form of Pan-Africanism driven by digital connectivity and shared experiences of poor governance. Young Africans across the continent are increasingly seeing their struggles as interconnected, organizing through social media platforms like TikTok, Facebook, and Discord to share strategies and provide mutual support.

The African Union’s measured response—calling for “restraint and dialogue”—contrasts sharply with the more forceful international reactions. Six European embassies, including Germany, France, and Britain, issued joint statements urging constructive dialogue, while Amnesty International condemned the government’s violent crackdown that has killed at least 22 people according to UN figures.

The Southern African Development Community (SADC), of which Madagascar has been a member since 2005, has expressed “deep concern” over the violence but has largely deferred to diplomatic solutions. This cautious approach reflects SADC’s traditional reluctance to criticize member governments, even when they face legitimate popular uprisings.

The protests have laid bare fundamental questions about Madagascar’s place in the global order. Despite possessing vast mineral wealth including rare earth elements crucial for renewable energy, 75 percent of Madagascar’s 32 million people live below the poverty line. The disconnect between natural abundance and human suffering has become a rallying cry for protesters who see their government as complicit in perpetuating this inequality.

As rival rallies took place in Antananarivo on Saturday, with pro-government supporters failing to match the energy and numbers of the youth movement, the political crisis appears far from resolved. The Gen Z protesters have given Rajoelina ultimatums and rejected his government dissolution as insufficient, demanding nothing less than his resignation and a complete overhaul of Madagascar’s political system.

One student protester captured the movement’s broader significance: “We are not just fighting for water and electricity. We are fighting for our future, for an end to the corruption and foreign control that has kept our people poor while our resources enrich others.”

This uprising in Madagascar represents more than a domestic political crisis—it embodies the growing determination of African youth to reclaim their continent’s sovereignty from the neocolonial arrangements that have persisted since independence. Whether Rajoelina’s government survives or falls, the Gen Z movement has already succeeded in exposing the fundamental contradictions of Madagascar’s dependent relationship with external powers and its failure to serve its own people.

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