Madagascar, or
Republic of Madagascar (older name
Malagasy Republic, French: ), is an island nation in the Indian Ocean
off the southeastern coast of Africa. The main island, also called
Madagascar, is the
fourth-largest island in the world,
and is home to 5% of the world's plant and animal species, of which
more than 80% are
endemic to Madagascar.
They include the
lemur infraorder of primates,
the carnivorous
fossa, three bird
families and six
baobab species. Two thirds
of the population live below the international poverty line of
US$1.25 a day.
History
As part of East
Gondwana, the territory of
Madagascar split from
Africa approximately
160 million years ago; the island of Madagascar was created when it
separated from the
Indian
subcontinent 80 to 100 million years ago.
Most archaeologists
estimate that the human settlement of Madagascar happened between
200 and 500 A.D., when seafarers from
southeast Asia (probably from Borneo
or the
southern Celebes
) arrived in
outrigger sailing canoes.
Bantu settlers probably crossed the Mozambique
Channel
to Madagascar at about the same time or shortly
afterwards. However, Malagasy tradition and ethnographic
evidence suggests that they may have been preceded by the
Mikea hunter gatherers.
The Anteimoro who
established a kingdom in Southern Madagascar in the Middle Ages
trace their origin to migrants from Somalia
.
The written history of Madagascar begins in the 7th century, when
Muslims established trading posts along the
northwest coast.During the
Middle Ages,
the island's kings began to extend their power through trade with
their Indian Ocean neighbours, notably
Arab,
Persian and
Somali traders who connected Madagascar with
East Africa, the Middle East and India.
Large
chiefdoms began to dominate
considerable areas of the island.
Among these were the Sakalava chiefdoms of the Menabe, centred in what is now the town of Morondava
, and of Boina, centred in what
is now the provincial capital of Mahajanga
(Majunga). The influence of the Sakalava extended
across what are now the provinces of Antsiranana
, Mahajanga
and Toliara
.
Madagascar served as an important transoceanic trading port for the
east African coast that gave Africa a trade route to the
Silk Road, and served simultaneously as a port for
incoming ships.
The wealth created in Madagascar through trade created a state
system ruled by powerful regional monarchs known as the
Maroserana. These monarchs adopted the cultural
traditions of subjects in their territories and expanded their
kingdoms. They took on divine status, and new nobility and artisan
classes were created.
Madagascar functioned in the East African
Middle Ages as a contact port for the other Swahili seaport
city-states such as Sofala
, Kilwa
, Mombasa
and Zanzibar
.
European
contact began in the year 1500, when the Portuguese
sea captain Diogo Dias
sighted the island after his ship separated from a fleet going to
India
. The Portuguese continued trading with the
islanders and named the island
São Lourenço (St.
Lawrence). In 1666,
François
Caron, the Director General of the newly formed
French East India Company, sailed
to Madagascar.
The Company failed to establish a colony on
Madagascar but established ports on the nearby islands of Bourbon
and Ile-de-France (today's Réunion
and Mauritius
). In the late 17th century, the French
established
trading posts along the east coast.
The most famous
pirate utopia is that
of Captain Misson and his pirate crew, who allegedly founded the
free colony of
Libertatia in northern
Madagascar in the late 17th century.
From about 1774 to
1824, Madagascar was a favourite haunt for pirates, including
Americans
, one of whom brought Malagasy rice to South Carolina
. Many European sailors were shipwrecked on
the coasts of the island, among them
Robert Drury, whose journal is one of
the few written depictions of life in southern Madagascar during
the 18th century. Sailors sometimes called Madagascar "Island of
the Moon".
File:Andrianampoinimerina.jpg |Andrianampoinimerina
(1795-1819).....File:Radama1.gif|Radama
I
(1810-1828)File:Reine1.JPG|Ranavalona
I
(1828-1861)File:Radama II with crown.jpg|Radama II
(1861-1863)File:Rasoherina.jpg|Rasoherina
(1863-1868)File:Ranavalona II.jpg|Ranavalona II
(1868-1883)File:Ranavalona III.jpg|Ranavalona III
(1883-1897)
Beginning in the 1790s,
Merina rulers
succeeded in establishing
hegemony over
most of the island, including the coast.
In 1817, the Merina
ruler and the British
governor of Mauritius
concluded a treaty abolishing the slave trade, which had been important in
Madagascar's economy. In return, the island received British
military and financial assistance. British influence remained
strong for several decades, during which the Merina court was
converted to
Presbyterianism,
Congregationalism and
Anglicanism.
With the domination of the Indian Ocean by the
Royal Navy and the end of the
Arab slave trade, the western
Sakalava lost their power to the emerging
Merina state. The
Betsimisaraka of the east coast also unified,
but this union soon faltered.
Queen
Ranavalona I called "Ranavalona
the Cruel" (reigned 1828-1861) issued a royal edict prohibiting the
practice of Christianity in Madagascar. By some estimates, 150,000
Christians died during the reign of Ranavalona. The island grew
more isolated, and commerce with other nations came to a
standstill.
France invaded Madagascar in 1883, in what became known as the
first
Franco-Hova War seeking to
restore property that had been confiscated from French citizens.
(
Hova is one of three Merina classes:
andriana –
aristocracy,
hova – common people,
andevo –
slaves.
The term hova was wrongly used by
the French to mean Merina.) At the war's end, Madagascar ceded
Antsiranana
(Diego Suarez) on the northern coast to France and
paid 560,000 francs to the heirs of Joseph-François Lambert.
In 1890, the British accepted the full formal imposition of a
French
protectorate.
In 1895,
a French flying column landed in
Mahajanga
(Majunga) and marched to the capital, Antananarivo
, where the city's defenders quickly
surrendered. Twenty French soldiers died fighting and 6,000
died of
malaria and other diseases before
the second Franco-Hova War ended.
After the conclusion of hostilities, in 1896 France annexed
Madagascar.
The 103-year-old Merina monarchy ended with
the royal family being sent into exile in Algeria
.
During
World War II, Malagasy troops fought in
France, Morocco
, and Syria
. Some
leaders in
Nazi Germany proposed
deporting all of Europe's
Jews to Madagascar
(the
Madagascar Plan), but nothing
came of this.
After France fell to Germany, the Vichy
government
administered Madagascar. During the Battle of Madagascar, British troops
occupied the island in 1942 to preclude its seizure by the Japanese
, after which the Free
French took over.
In 1947, with French prestige at low ebb, the
Malagasy Uprising broke out. It was
suppressed after over a year of bitter fighting, with 8,000 to
90,000 people killed. The French later established reformed
institutions in 1956 under the
Loi
Cadre (Overseas Reform Act), and Madagascar moved
peacefully towards independence.
The Malagasy Republic
was proclaimed on October
14, 1958, as an autonomous state within the French Community. A period of
provisional government ended with the adoption of a
constitution in 1959 and full independence on
June 26, 1960. In 2006 the country experienced
an attempted
coup.
Politics
Although the present head of State has self-proclaimed himself,
Madagascar is usually a
semi-presidential representative democratic republic, whereby the
Prime Minister of Madagascar is
head of government, and of a
pluriform multi-party system.
Executive power is exercised by the
government.
Legislative power is
vested in both the
government and the
Senate and the
National Assembly. The
Judiciary is independent of the executive
and the legislature.
The political situation in Madagascar has been marked by struggle
for control. After Madagascar gained independence from France in
1960, assassinations, military coups and disputed elections
featured prominently.
Didier Ratsiraka took power in a
military coup in 1975 and ruled until 2001, with a short break when
he was ousted in the early 1990s. When
Marc Ravalomanana and Ratsiraka both
claimed victory after presidential elections in December 2001,
Ratsiraka's supporters tried to blockade the capital, Antananarivo,
which was pro-Ravalomanana. After eight months of sporadic violence
with considerable economic disruption, a recount in April 2002 led
the High Constitutional Court to pronounce Ravalomanana president,
but it was not until July that Ratsiraka fled to France and
Ravalomanana gained control of the country.
Internal conflict in Madagascar had been minimal in the years that
followed and since 2002, Ravalomanana and his party,
Tiako-I-Madagasikara (TIM), have dominated political life. In an
attempt to restrict the power and influence of the president, the
prime minister and the 150-seat parliament have been given greater
power in recent years.
Tension since was generally associated with elections. A
presidential election took place in December 2006 with some
protests over worsening standards of living, despite a government
drive to eradicate poverty. Calls by a retired army general in
November 2006 for Ravalomanana to step down were said to have been
'misinterpreted' as a coup attempt.
2009 Malagasy protests
The latest, and ongoing, spate of violence pitted then-President
Marc Ravalomanana against
Andry
Rajoelina, former mayor of the capital, Antananarivo. Since the
power tussle started on 26 January, more than 170 people were
killed. Rajoelina mobilized his supporters to take to the streets
of Antananarivo to demand Ravalomanana's ousting on the grounds of
his alleged "autocratic" style of government.
Ravalomanana's resignation
After losing support of the military and under intense pressure
from Rajoelina, President Ravalomanana resigned on 17 March 2009.
Ravalomanana assigned his powers to a military council loyal to
himself headed by Vice-Admiral Hyppolite Ramaroson. The military
called the move by Ravalomanana a "ploy" and said that it would
support Rajoelina as leader. Rajoelina had already declared himself
the new leader a month earlier and has since assumed the role of
acting President. He has appointed
Monja
Roindefo as Prime Minister. Rajoelina announced that elections
would be held in two years and that the constitution would be
amended.
The
European Union, amongst other
international entities, has refused to recognize the new
government, due to it being installed by force. The
African Union, which proceeded to suspend
Madagascar's membership on 20 March and the
Southern Africa
Development Community both criticized the forced resignation of
Ravalomanana.
United Nations Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon's spokesperson said he is
"gravely concerned about the evolving developments in
Madagascar".
Provinces and regions
Madagascar is currently divided into six autonomous provinces
(
faritany mizakatena), and subdivided into 22
regions (
faritra), the latter created in
2004. The regions will be the highest subdivision level when the
provinces are dissolved in accordance with the results of the 4
April 2007 referendum, which means by 4 October 2009.
The regions are further subdivided into 116 districts, 1,548
communes, and 16,969 fokontany. The major cities have a special
status as "commune urbaine", at the same level as the
districts.
Geography
At , Madagascar is the world's 46th-largest country and the fourth
largest
island.
It is slightly bigger
than France
, and is one
of 11 distinct physiographic provinces
of the South African Platform
physiographic division.
Towards the east, a steep escarpment leads from the central
highlands down into a ribbon of
rain
forest with a narrow coastal further east.
The Canal des
Pangalanes
is a chain of natural and man-made lakes connected by canals that runs parallel to the
east coast for some (about two-thirds of the island). The
descent from the central highlands toward the west is more gradual,
with remnants of deciduous forest and
savanna-like
plains (which in
the south and southwest, are quite dry and host spiny
desert and
baobabs). On the
west coast are many protected harbours, but silting is a major
problem caused by sediment from the high levels of
erosion inland.
Along the crest of this ridge lie the central highlands, a
plateau region ranging in altitude from above sea
level. The central highlands are characterised by terraced,
rice-growing valleys lying between barren hills. Here, the red
laterite soil that covers much of the
island has been exposed by erosion, showing clearly why the country
is often referred to as the "Red Island".
The island's highest peak, Maromokotro, at , is found in the
Tsaratanana Massif, located in the far north of the country.
The
Ankaratra Massif is in the central area south of the capital
Antananarivo
and hosts the third highest mountain on the island,
Tsiafajavona, with an altitude of . Further south is the
Andringitra massif which has several peaks over including the
second and fourth highest peaks, Pic Imarivolanitra, more widely
known as Pic Boby ( ), and Pic Bory ( ). Other peaks in the massif
include Pic Soaindra ( ) and Pic Ivangomena ( ).
This massif also
contains the Andringitra Reserve
. On very rare occasions, this region
experiences
snow in winter due to its high
altitude.
There are two seasons: a hot, rainy season from November to April,
and a cooler, dry season from May to October. South-eastern
trade winds predominate, and the island
occasionally experiences
cyclones.
Ecology
Madagascar's long isolation from the neighboring continents has
resulted in a unique mix of plants and animals, many found nowhere
else in the world; some ecologists refer to Madagascar as the
"eighth continent". Of the 10,000 plants native to Madagascar, 90%
are found nowhere else in the world. Madagascar's varied fauna and
flora are endangered by human activity, as a third of its native
vegetation has disappeared since the 1970s, and only 18% remains
intact. Since the arrival of humans 2000 years ago, Madagascar has
lost more than 90% of its original forest. The
elephant birds, which were giant
ratites native to Madagascar, have been extinct since
at least the 17th century.
Aepyornis was the world's largest bird,
believed to have been over tall.
Most
lemurs are listed as
endangered or threatened species. Many
species have gone extinct in the last centuries, mainly due to
habitat destruction and hunting.
The eastern, or
windward side of the island
is home to
tropical rainforests,
while the western and southern sides, which lie in the
rain shadow of the central highlands, are home
to
tropical dry
forests, thorn forests, and
deserts and xeric shrublands.
Madagascar's dry deciduous rain forest has been preserved generally
better than the eastern rainforests or the high central
plateau, presumably due to historically low
population densities. Madagascar has
several national parks.
Extensive
deforestation has taken
place in parts of the country, some due to mining operations.
Slash-and-burn activity, locally
called
tavy, has occurred in the eastern and western dry
forests as well as on the central high plateau, reducing certain
forest
habitat and applying
pressure to some
endangered
species. Slash-and-burn is a method sometimes used by
shifting cultivators to create
short-term yields from marginal soils. When practiced repeatedly
without intervening fallow periods, the
nutrient-poor soils may be exhausted or eroded to
an unproductive state. The resulting increased
surface runoff from burned lands has caused
significant erosion and resulting high sedimentation to western
rivers.
As a part of conservation efforts, the Wildlife Conservation
Society has recently opened a Madagascar! exhibit at the Bronx Zoo.
The New York Academy of Sciences recently published a Podcast about
the Madagascar! exhibit, which details the fauna and flora of
Madagascar and what types of projects the WCS is involved with in
the country. The Podcast can be listened to here
Madagascar is represented in the
FIPS 10-4
geographical encoding standard by the symbol
MA.
Economy
Agriculture, including
fishing and
forestry, is a
mainstay of the economy. Major exports are
coffee,
vanilla (Madagascar is
the world's largest producer and exporter of vanilla),
sugarcane,
cloves,
cocoa,
rice,
cassava (tapioca),
beans,
bananas,
peanuts and
livestock products. Vanilla has historically been of particular
importance, and when in 1985
Coca-cola
switched to
New Coke which involved less
vanilla, Madagascar's economy took a marked downturn, but returned
to previous levels after the return of
Coke
Classic.
Structural reforms began in the
late 1980s, initially under pressure from international financial
institutions, notably the
World Bank. An
initial privatization program (1988–1993) and the development of an
export processing zone (EPZ)
regime in the early 1990s were key milestones in this effort. A
period of significant stagnation from 1991 to 1996 was followed by
five years of solid economic growth and accelerating foreign
investment, driven by a second wave of privatizations and EPZ
development. Although structural reforms advanced, governance
remained weak and perceived
corruption in Madagascar was extremely
high. During the period of solid growth from 1997 to 2001,
poverty levels remained stubbornly high, especially
in rural areas. A six-month political crisis triggered by a dispute
over the outcome of the presidential elections held in December
2001 virtually halted economic activity in much of the country in
the first half of 2002.
Real GDP dropped
12.7% for the year 2002, inflows of
foreign investment dropped sharply, and
the crisis tarnished Madagascar's budding reputation as an
AGOA standout and a promising place to invest. After
the crisis, the economy rebounded with GDP growth of over 10% in
2003.
Currency depreciation
and rising
inflation in 2004 have hampered
economic performance, but growth for the year reached 5.3%, with
inflation reaching around 25% at the end of the year. In 2005
inflation was brought under control by tight monetary policy of
raising the
Taux Directeur (central bank rate) to 16% and
tightening reserve requirements for banks. Thus growth was expected
to reach around 6.5% in 2005.
Following the 2002 political crisis, the government attempted to
set a new course and build confidence, in coordination with
international
financial institutions and donors.
Madagascar developed
a recovery plan in collaboration with the private sector and donors
and presented it at a "Friends of Madagascar" conference organized
by the World Bank in Paris
in July
2002. Donor countries demonstrated their confidence in the
new government by pledging $1 billion in assistance over five
years. The Malagasy Government identified road infrastructure as
its principle priority and underlined its commitment to
public-private partnership by establishing a joint public-private
sector steering committee.

Rice paddies in Madagascar
In 2000, Madagascar embarked on the preparation of a
Poverty Reduction Strategy
Paper (PRSP) under the
Heavily Indebted Poor
Countries (HIPC) Initiative.
The boards of the IMF
and World
Bank agreed in December 2000 that the country had reached the
decision point for debt relief under the HIPC Initiative and
defined a set of conditions for Madagascar to reach the completion
point. In October 2004, the boards of the IMF and the
World Bank determined that Madagascar had
reached the completion point under the enhanced HIPC
Initiative.
The
Madagascar-U.S.
Business Council
was formed as a collaboration between the United States Agency for
International Development (
USAID) and
Malagasian artisan producers in Madagascar in 2002. The
U.S.-Madagascar Business Council was formed in the United States in
May 2003, and the two organisations continue to explore ways to
work for the benefit of both groups.
The government of President Ravalomanana is aggressively seeking
foreign investment and is tackling many of the obstacles to such
investment, including combating corruption, reforming
land-ownership laws, encouraging study of American and European
business techniques, and active pursuit of foreign investors.
President Ravalomanana rose to prominence through his agro-foods
TIKO company, and is known for attempting to
apply many of the lessons learned in the world of business to
running the government. Some recent concerns have arisen about the
conflict of interest between his policies and the activities of his
firms. Most notable among them the preferential treatment for rice
imports initiated by the government in late 2004 when responding to
a production shortfall in the country.
Madagascar's sources of growth are
tourism;
textile and light manufacturing exports
(notably through the EPZs); agricultural products; and mining.
Madagascar is the world's leading producer of vanilla and accounts
for about half the world's export market. Tourism targets the niche
eco-tourism market, capitalizing on Madagascar's unique
biodiversity, unspoiled natural habitats,
national parks and
lemur species.
Exports from the EPZs, located around
Antananarivo and Antsirabe
, comprise the majority of garment manufacture, targeting the US market under
AGOA and the European markets under the
Everything But Arms (EBA)
agreement. Agricultural exports consist of low-volume
high-value products like vanilla,
litchies
and
essential oils.
A small but growing
part of the economy is based on mining of ilmenite, with investments emerging in recent
years, particularly near Tulear
and
Fort
Dauphin
. Mining corporation
Rio Tinto Group expects to begin operations
near Fort Dauphin in 2008, following several years of
infrastructure preparation. The mining project is highly
controversial, with Friends of the Earth and other environmental
organizations filing reports to detail their concerns about effects
on the local environment and communities.
Several major projects are underway in the mining and
oil and
gas sectors
that, if successful, will give a significant boost to the Malagasy
economy.In the mining sector, these include the development of coal
at Sakoa and nickel near Tamatave. In oil,
Madagascar Oil is developing the massive
onshore heavy oil field at
Tsimiroro and
ultra
heavy oil field at
Bemolanga.
Foreign relations
Madagascar was historically perceived as being on the margin of
mainstream African affairs despite being a founding member of the
Organisation of African
Unity (OAU), which was founded in 1963.
From 1978 to 1991,
President Ratsiraka emphasized independence and nonalignment and
followed an "all points" policy stressing ties with socialist and radical regimes, including North Korea
, Cuba
, Libya
, and
Iran
. But President
Albert
Zafy, taking office in 1993, expressed his desire for
diplomatic relations with all countries.
Early in his tenure,
he established formal ties with South Korea
and sent emissaries to Morocco
.
Starting in 1997,
globalisation
encouraged the government and President Ratsiraka to adhere to
market-oriented policies and to engage world markets. External
relations reflect this trend, although Madagascar's physical
isolation and strong traditional insular orientation have limited
its activity in regional economic organizations and relations with
its
East African neighbours.
It enjoys
closer and generally good relations with its Indian Ocean
neighbours – Mauritius
, Réunion
, and Comoros
. Active relationships with Europe, especially France
, Germany
, and Switzerland
, as well as with Britain
, Russia
, Japan
, India
, and
China
have been strong since independence.
More
recently, President Ravalomanana has cultivated strong links with
the United
States
, and Madagascar was the first country to benefit
from the Millennium
Challenge Account . Madagascar is also a member of the International Criminal Court
with a Bilateral Immunity Agreement of protection for the US
-military (as covered under Article
98).
The OAU dissolved in 2002 and was replaced by the
African Union. Madagascar was not permitted to
attend the first African Union summit due to the dispute over the
results of the election in December 2001, but rejoined the African
Union in July 2003 after a 14-month hiatus triggered by the 2002
political crisis. However, Madagascar was suspended again by the
African Union in March 2009 due to the
ongoing political
crisis.
During his presidency,
Marc
Ravalomanana traveled widely promoting Madagascar abroad and
consciously sought to strengthen relations with
Anglophone countries as a means of balancing
traditionally strong French influence.
He also cultivated
strong ties with China
during his
tenure.
In
November 2004, after an absence of almost 30 years, Madagascar
re-opened its embassy in London
. On
15 December 2004 the
Foreign
Secretary,
Jack Straw, announced the
closure of the British embassy in Antananarivo to save £250,000 a
year. He also announced an end to the government's aid to
Madagascar, the DFID-funded Small Grants Scheme. The embassy closed
in August 2005 despite
petitions and
protests from African heads of state, a European commissioner, the
Malagasy Senate, many British companies, 30 or so NGOs operating in
Madagascar, and members of the public.
The British Embassy was previously closed (also for financial
reasons) from 1975 to 1980. The Anglo-Malagasy Society are
campaigning to have it re-opened.
Demographics
Madagascar's population is predominantly of mixed
Austronesian (i.e.
South-East Asian/
Pacific Islander) and
African origin. Those who are visibly
Austronesian in appearance and culture
are the minority, found mostly in the highland regions. Recent
research suggests that the island was uninhabited until
Austronesian seafarers arrived about 1,500 to 2,000 years ago.
Recent
DNA research shows that the Malagasy
people are approximately of half Austronesian and half East African
descent, although some
Arab,
Indian and
European influence is present along the coast.
Malagasy
language shares some 90% of its basic vocabulary with the Ma'anyan language from the region of the
Barito River in southern Borneo
.
Subsequent
migrations from the East
Indies and Africa consolidated this original mixture, and 36
separate tribal groups emerged. Austronesian features are most
predominant in the
Merina (3 million) ; the
coastal people (called
côtiers) are of more clearly
African origin. The largest
coastal groups are
the
Betsimisaraka (1.5 million) and
the
Tsimihety and
Sakalava (700,000 each). The Vezo live in the
southwest. Two of the southern tribes are the Antandroy and the
Antanosy. Other tribes include Tankarana (northern tip), Sihanaka
and Bezanozano (east), Tanala (south-east), An-Taimoro, Tambahoaka,
Zafisoro, An-Taisaka and Timanambondro (south-east coast), and
Mahafaly and Bara (south-west).
Chinese and
Indian minorities also exist, as well
as Europeans, mostly
French.
The
number of Comorans
residing in Madagascar was drastically reduced
after anti-Comoran rioting in Mahajanga
in 1976.
During the French colonial administration (1895–1960) and some time
after independence, people were officially classified in
ethnic groups. This practice was abandoned in
the first census (1975) after independence, so any recent
classification and figures for ethnic groups is an unofficial
estimate. There is for instance no mention of ethnicity or religion
in the national identity cards. Also, territorial divisions
(provinces, regions) do not follow any ethnic division lines,
despite an attempt by the colonial administration in the early 20th
century. Ethnic divisions continue, and may cause violence, but
their role is limited in today's society. Ethnic tensions in
Madagascar often produce violent conflict between the
Merina highlanders and coastal peoples. Regional
political parties are also rare, although some parties receive most
of their support in certain areas.
Only two general censuses, 1975 and 1993, have been carried out
after independence.
In 1993 (last census) there were 18,497 foreign residents on
Madagascar, or 0.15% of the population.
Language
The
Malagasy language is of
Malayo-Polynesian origin and is
generally spoken throughout the island. Madagascar is a
francophone country, and
French is spoken among the educated
population of this former French colony.
English, although still rare, is becoming
more widely spoken, and in 2003, the government began a pilot
project of introducing the teaching of English into the
primary grades of 44 schools, with hopes
of taking the project nationwide. Many
Peace
Corps volunteers are serving to further this effort and train
teachers.
In the first Constitution of 1958,
Malagasy and
French were named the official languages of
the Malagasy Republic.
No official languages were recorded in the Constitution of 1992.
Instead, Malagasy was named the national language; however, many
sources still claimed that Malagasy and French were official
languages, as they were
de facto. In April 2000, a citizen
brought a legal case on the grounds that the publication of
official documents in the French language only was
unconstitutional. The High Constitutional Court observed in its
decision that, in the absence of a language law, French still had
the character of an official language.
In the Constitution of 2007, Malagasy remains the national language
while official languages are reintroduced: Malagasy, French, and
English. The motivation for the inclusion of English is partly to
improve relations with the neighbouring countries where English is
used and to encourage
foreign
direct investment.
Health
The
fertility rate is at about 5
children per woman. There are about 29 physicians per 100,000
persons.
Infant mortality was at 74
per 1,000 live births in 2005.
Life
expectancy at birth was at 58.4 in the early 21st
century.Expenditure on health was 29 US$ (PPP) in 2004.
Culture
Malagasy culture reflects a blend of Southeast Asian, Arab, African
and European influences. Houses in Madagascar are typically
four-sided with a peaked roof, in a style commonly seen in
Southeast Asia, rather than the circular style of hut construction
more commonly found in Eastern Africa. Rice forms the basis of
every meal in most parts of the country as in Asia. The dishes
prepared to accompany the rice vary depending on local availability
of food products and are known as laoka.
Education
A significant proportion of the adult population are
illiterate. The female youth literacy rate is
below the male youth literacy rate. Public expenditure on education
was at 16.4 % of total government expenditure in the 2000-2007
period. Public current expenditure on primary education per pupil
is at about US$ 57 (PPP).Madagascar has several universities.
Cuisine
Madagascar has a distinctive and rich musical heritage. The early
Austronesian settlers brought with them the predecessor to the
bamboo tube zither known as the
valiha as
well as other instruments that would form the basis for traditional
Malagasy music. The influence of
Africans is evident in certain drumming and polyharmonic singing
styles, while the tendency toward minor chords along the coasts
reflects an Arab musical influence. European pirates likewise
contributed to Malagasy musical traditions, importing the guitar,
accordion, piano and the instruments used in
hiragasy performance including the violin, trumpet
and clarinet.
Music
Arab immigrants were few in number compared to the Indonesians and
Bantus, but they left a lasting impression. The
Malagasy names for seasons, months, days,
and coins are Arabic in origin, as is the practice of circumcision,
the communal grain pool, and different forms of salutation. The
Arab
magician, known as the
ombiasy, established themselves in the courts of many
Malagasy tribal kingdoms. Arab
immigrants imposed the patriarchal system of family and clan rule
on Madagascar. Previous to the Arabs, the
Malagasies practiced the
Polynesian matriarchal system whereby
rights of privilege and property are conferred equally on men and
women.
Mythology
The country has a rich oratory tradition in the form of
hainteny,
kabary and
ohabolana. An epic poem, the
Ibonia, has been handed down over the centuries in
several different forms across the island and showcases the lively
and highly developed oral traditions of Madagascar.
Hainteny
The
zebu, or humped cattle, occupies an
important place in traditional Malagasy culture. The animal can
take on sacred importance and constitutes the wealth of the owner,
a tradition originating on the African mainland. Cattle rustling,
originally a rite of passage for young men in the plains areas of
Madagascar where the largest herds of cattle are kept, has become a
dangerous and sometimes deadly criminal enterprise as herdsmen in
the Southwest attempt to defend their cattle with traditional
spears against increasingly armed professional rustlers.
Where
African influences are strongest, as in the Southern region around
Tulear
, wealth and
social status are measured in cattle, and the zebu can outnumber the inhabitants by two or three to
one. Zebu are a popular motif on
aloalo, the carved wooden poles that decorate tombs
among some tribes in the southwestern part of the
country.
Andrianampoinimerina (circa 1745–1810)
united the Merina kingdom, moving his capitol from Ambohimanga to Antananarivo
and building his royal palace, or rova
, on a strategic location on the highest hilltop
overlooking the city. A number of cultural traditions,
including the
kabary and the
hiragasy, were popularized during the period of his
administration.
Religion
Traditional religion
Approximately 50% of the country's population practice traditional
religion, which tends to emphasize links between the living and the
dead. The Merina in the highlands particularly tend to hold tightly
to this practice. They believe that the dead join their
ancestors in the ranks of divinity and that
ancestors are intensely concerned with the fate of their living
descendants. The Merina and
Betsileo
reburial practice of
famadihana,
or "turning over the dead", celebrates this spiritual communion.
In this
ritual, relatives' remains are removed from the family tomb
, rewrapped
in new silk shrouds, and returned to the tomb following festive
ceremonies in their honor where sometimes the bodies are lifted and
carried high above the celebrants heads with singing and dancing
before returning them to the tomb.
Traditionally, the Malagasy hold their ancestors in high esteem and
many believe they continue to intervene in events on Earth after
their death. A powerful individual may establish a fady (
taboo) in his or her lifetime that all their
descendents or those of community members will be required to
respect well after their death, meaning that when traveling in
Madagascar it is advisable to seek out village elders or
authorities and inquire into local fady in order not to
inadvertently transgress and offend the local population. This
veneration of ancestors has also lead to the tradition of tomb
building and the
famadihana, a practice
whereby a deceased family member's remains may be taken from the
tomb to be periodically re-wrapped in fresh silk shrouds before
being replaced in the tomb. The event is an occasion to celebrate
the loved one's memory, reunite with family and community, and
enjoy a festive atmosphere. Residents of surrounding villages are
often invited to attend the party, where food and rum are often
served and a
hiragasy troupe or other
musical entertainment is typically present.
Christianity
Today about 45% of the Malagasy are
Christian, divided almost evenly between
Catholics and
Protestants. Many incorporate the
cult of the dead with their other
religious beliefs and bless their dead at church before proceeding
with the traditional burial rites. They also may invite a
Christian minister to attend a
famadihana. Many of the Christian churches are influential
in politics. The best example of this is the Malagasy Council of
Churches (FFKM) comprising the four oldest and most prominent
Christian denominations—(
Roman
Catholic,
Church of Jesus Christ in
Madagascar,
Lutheran,
and
Anglican). In the 19th century under
Queen
Ranavalona I, there was infamous
persecution and mass extermination of Christians.
Islam
Islam in Madagascar constitutes
about 7% of the population. The Arab and Somali Muslim traders who
first brought Islam in the Middle Ages had a deep influence on the
west coast. For example, many Malagasy converted to Islam and the
Malagasy language was, for the first time, transcribed into an
alphabet, based on the
Arabic
alphabet, called
Sorabe.
Muslims are concentrated in the provinces of
Mahajanga
and Antsiranana
(Diego Suarez). Muslims are divided
between those of Malagasy ethnicity, Indians, Pakistanis and Comorians
. The number of
mosques
in the south-east region has increased from 10 to 50 in the last
ten years. Recently, several tribes in Madagascar have been
converting to Islam. One particular occasion is the Intimor tribe
of the southeast, of which 17,500 converted en masse.
Hinduism
Hinduism
in Madagascar began with Gujarati
from the Saurashtra
region of India
as far back
as 1900, when Madagascar was a French
colony. Most Hindus in Madagascar speak
Gujarati or
Hindi.
See also
References
- Human Development Indices, Table 3:
Human and income poverty, p. 35. Retrieved on 1 June 2009
- BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Giant palm tree puzzles
botanists
- Malagasy languages, Encyclopædia Britannica
- Migration from Kalimantan to Madagascar by O. C.
Dahl
- Archaeology, Language, and the African Past by Roger
Blench
- The African diaspora in the Indian Ocean By Shihan de S.
Jayasuriya, Richard Pankhurst pg 82
- Cities of the Middle East and North Africa By Michael Dumper,
Bruce E. Stanley, Janet L. Abu-Lughod pg 391
- Kingdoms of Madagascar: Maroserana and
Merina
- From MADAGASCAR to the MALAGASY REPUBLIC, by Raymond
K. Kent pg 65–71
- Madagascar: An Historical and Descriptive Account of the
Island and Its Former Dependencies by Samuel Pasfield Oliver.,
p. 6. (excerpted in Google Book Search)
- Ranavalona I (Merina queen). Britannica Online
Encyclopedia.
- 1947 L'insurrection á Madagascar - Jean Fremigacci
- Marianne
- IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | Madagascar |
MADAGASCAR: 'Violence could escalate' | Governance Conflict | News
Item
- IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | Madagascar |
MADAGASCAR: Former president sentenced to five years in prison |
Governance | News Item
- IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | Madagascar |
MADAGASCAR: Hoping for fair, transparent, uncontroversial elections
| Economy Governance Other | Feature
- IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | Madagascar |
MADAGASCAR: Appeal launched despite political uncertainty |
Children Economy Food Security Governance Health & Nutrition
Conflict ...
- African Union suspends Madagascar over 'coup' -
Africa, World - The Independent
- (UPDATE) Army puts Madagascar opposition leader in
charge | Home >> Other Sections >> Breaking
News
- The Eighth Continent: Life, Death, and Discovery in the Lost
World of Madagascar
- Terrestrial Ecoregions -- Madagascar subhumid
forests (AT0118), National Geographic.
- Davies, S. J. J. F. (2003)
- Lemurs Hunted, Eaten Amid Civil Unrest, Group
Says. National Geographic News. August 21, 2009.
- Science & the City | Public Gateway to the New
York Academy of Sciences
- Madagascar - Country Facts- Goway Travel
Experiences
- "Made in Madagascar: Exporting Handicrafts to the U.S. Market:
a Project with the UN Public-Private Alliance for Rural
Development; Final Report"[1], A Project with the UN Public-Private
Alliance for Rural Development.
- Madagascar - Mining: Heavy Minerals Mining
- Rio Tinto's Madagascar mining project
- "Africa rejects Madagascar 'coup'"
bbc.co.uk 20 March 2009 Link accessed 20 March 2009
- U.S. Library of Congress," Madagascar - Minorities"
- L'ethnicisation des rapports sociaux à
Madagascar
- " Ethnic strife rocks Madagascar". BBC News. May
14, 2002.
- "Le malgache et le français sont les langues officielles de la
République Malgache." Constitution, Titre I, Art. 2; Constitutional
Law 14 October 1958.
- Haute Cour Constitutionnelle De Madagascar,
Décision n°03-HCC/D2 Du 12 avril 2000
- Madagascar adopts English as official language,
ClickAfrique.com, 10 April 2007.
-
http://hdrstats.undp.org/en/countries/data_sheets/cty_ds_MDG.html
-
http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/madagascar_statistics.html
- Madagascar and Africa III. The Anteimoro: A Theocracy in
Southeastern Madagascar, by R. K. Kent The Journal of African
History © 1969 pg 62
- Madagascar, Southern Africa
- 17,500 of Intimor Tribe come back to Islam
External links
- Government
- General information
- News media
- Ecology
- Miscellaneous
- The Madagascar Project, Project set up to help
Malagasy communities tackle the causes and effects of poverty
- Old maps of Madagascar by CEGET library (CNRS,
France)
- Azafady UK charity and Malagasy NGO working in
southeast Madagascar to alleviate poverty, improve well-being and
protect beautiful unique environments with the help of its award
winning volunteering programmes.
- Shama
Foundation of Madagascar charitable organization providing
scholarships for underprivileged students in Madagascar
- Opinions of La Haute Cour Constitutionelle du
Madagascar
- Blue
Ventures award winning not-for-profit organisation dedicated to
facilitating projects and expeditions that enhance global marine
conservation and research. Based in Andavadoaka
, South West coast of Madagascar.
- Foko-madagascar not-for-profit organization and Rising
Voices grantee project dedicated to the use of ICT as a tool to
promote sustainable development, especially combining human
development and the protection of the environment.
- WildMadagascar.org Overview, news, photos, cultural
history. English and French
- Madagascar Photos Madagascar
- The
Palmarium reserve, is situated on the East coast of
Madagascar.
- Keelonga, keelonga is an
organisation dedicated to assisting rural primary schools with
infrastructures and teachers