Saturday , 4 May 2024
enfrit
At the occasion of a couple of days long plain session in Kinshasa, the Southern African Development Community’s state and government chiefs have rejected the Rajoelina mobility led settlement of a Transition's new government.

The SADC has thrown up the new government built by Monja Roindefo

 

The 29th summit of the SADC doesn’t recognize the second Monja Roindefo government. The chiefs of states gathered on the 7th and the 8th of September had been given a new opportunity to assess the Malagasy crisis. “The Summit has rejected and condemned in the strongest terms any one-sided decision which would violate the Maputo mindset and agreements “read the SADC made statement prior to reiterating that the grouping “also maintained the decision to cast Madagascar aside from the SADC until the restoration of constitutional order in this country”. 

 

As an end to the Kinshasa summit, the SADC cheered the Mozambican former president, Joaquim Chissano, on keeping negotiations going between the different Malagasy political mobilities.  

 

Once again, the building of the second Monja Roindefo government has been qualified as a “one-sided” decision, this time around by the SADC. The Southern African Development Community preferred to stick to the consensus principles and recalled that “The Summit noticed with concern the attempts to jeopardize the agreements signed in Maputo by all Malagasy political mobilities on August 9th, 2009 “. 

 

The position held by the SADC is, henceforth, backing the joint opinion given out by the whole diplomatic body in Antananarivo. The lack of compromise in the appointment of the government’s new members actually caused series of negative reactions among the acting diplomats in the Malagasy capital city.  

 

The international community is inviting anew the political mobilities to return to the negotiation table, though talks have been broken since the holding of the second leg of the Maputo summit by the end of August. The Malagasy deadlock seems more and more entrenched, whereas the international community is waving some new sanctions against Madagascar. 

 

After September 16th, Madagascar will be on the verge of diplomatic isolation. Further more measures are hanging over, could national unity fail to be found, up to this deadline. The African Union already granted a six months long period of time from the departure of Marc Ravalomanana on March 17th, to the High Authority of Transition to restore constitutional order in the. 

 

Beside the suspension of international founding, the Great Isle’s “de facto” leaders are risking the freezing of their foreign bank accounts as well as severe foreign visa delivery restrictions.