samedi , 26 avril 2025
enfrit
The High Authority of Transition has lead in the wing. Internal conflicts become an open secret. And actually these might go very far.

Little by little, the HAT becomes a rat race

 

With a HAT made of forty members and a government which welcomed politicians of different sides, the Transition’s team could only go adrift little by little. Since the latest weeks, the High Authority of Transition has hardly been hiding the denting infection, like a rotted fruit on its way to total degeneration. 

 

The president of the High Authority of Transition, Andry Rajoelina, has himself admitted that some of his collaborators lack good will. But they would be in minority. 

 

Within the putschist regime, visions of the state management under the Transition are diverging. Rinah Rakotomanga, ex Prime minister Tantely Andrianarivo’s former advisor, and currently appointed by the HAT as embassy advisor in Paris, was shocked when noticing the role played by Norbert Ratsirahonana by Rajoelina’s side. She went as far as  » gently  » but publicly inviting, on TV, Ratsirahonana  » to retire « .  

 

Somehow, the HAT seems to gradually fall apart, to such an extent that some of its members have been going « invisible » during the latest days, as to preserve their « integrity » from a less and less accepted institutions.  

 

More troubling facts, members of the HAT currently seem to make the maximum to store the largest profits, in forecast of the next poles. Antsiva radio, close to the putschist regime, broadcasted on July 22nd that an official from the Transition asked in a private capacity, 10 millions dollars from an Asian corporation which wanted to work in Madagascar. 

 

For a while, the very attitude of the Prime minister of the Transition, Monja Roindefo, would become doubtful for some of Andry Rajoelina’s collaborators. During the latest weeks, the government’s chief is in « mission » through the Great Isle’s different regions, as to scout the general mood. 

 

Back and forth, little know leaders who invited Monja Roindefo to contest the next presidential poles, got the right to speak out to the crowd. The other members of the HAT have rather not utter a commentary for the moment. 

 

Among the HAT sympathizers, recently grouped in associations whose goal is to provide a good picture to the Transition, questions begin to emerge: Do Monja Roindefo and Andry Rajoelina still get along as well as they used to on the place of May 13th?