Former Mauritius President Cassam Uteem (left), co-leader of the
Carter Center’s observation mission, talks with local media in
Madagascar on Dec. 20. President Uteem also led the Center’s 2011
election observation mission to Tunisia.
Story courtesy of The Carter Center Blog; picture courtesy of J. Stremlau
The Carter Center was pleased to partner with the Electoral Institute
for Sustainable Democracy in Africa for a joint election observation
mission to Madagascar’s Dec. 20 legislative and second-round
presidential elections. Former Mauritius President Cassam Uteem, EISA
Executive Director Dr. Denis Kadima, and I co-led the delegation.
One of the world’s poorest countries, Madagascar has faced economic, social, and political stagnation since 33-year-old former radio disk jockey Andry Rajoelina
wrested power from President Ravalomanana after a 2009 coup d’etat. The
international community did not recognize the new government, and
economic activity and human development indicators fell severely amid
the political crisis.
The Carter Center felt it could play an important role by providing a
credible and impartial assessment of the troubled electoral process,
the success of which was critical to moving Madagascar out of the
nightfall of corrupt autocratic rule and into a dawn of democracy.
These critical elections were the culmination of an extraordinary and
complex five-year concerted diplomatic campaign — led by the Southern
African Development Community with substantial backing from Western
democracies — to try to reverse the 2009 coup.
The Carter Center highlighted challenges to the electoral process,
encouraged resolution of issues through transparent measures, and
provided recommendations to improve future elections.
Our joint delegation congratulated the Malagasy people for a peaceful
vote on Dec. 20, and on Jan. 3, Madagascar’s electoral commission
declared Hery Rajaonarimampianina the winner of the presidential runoff.
The opposition is challenging the presidential election result, and The
Carter Center will monitor the resolution of these claims by the High
Electoral Court, a process we urge all to respect.
We hope these elections will enable Madagascar to rejoin the
community of nations and obtain the support it needs to reduce the
prolonged and escalating humanitarian crisis among its 22 million
people.
It will be important for the international community to hold all
parties accountable to their promises to abide by the results and to
reward any meaningful post-election process of national inclusion and
reconciliation that emerges.
Madagascar’s African and international partners should regard
electoral success as the start of a long process not only to help
relieve the suffering of the Malagasy people, but also to test
techniques of collective engagement that might eventually help other
troubled states.
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