2015-01-06 10:26
Antananarivo - A protester in Madagascar was killed when police
put down a demonstration against recurring electricity cuts in the
eastern city of Toamasina, the victim's family and police said on
Monday.
The death, which happened on 3 January, was the second
arising from protests in the port city of Toamasina over repeated power
blackouts, after an aggressive police response to a violent
demonstration on 23 December left one person dead.
According to
family members of the man killed on Saturday, his death was caused by a
beating from special police forces deployed to contain the display of
anger.
Madagascar police confirmed to AFP that a protester who had been arrested died in hospital, but denied any beating had occurred.
"It
was the shoving that took place as he was getting into the [police] car
that was fatal," said general Njato Andrianjanaka, adding that at the
time of his arrest the deceased was in "an advanced state of
intoxication" - a claim the victim's family contests.
Power supplies
The
unrest began after the latest in what has become a regular series of
blackouts in Madagascar, where power supplies remain insufficient with
only 15% of the island electrified.
The rolling cuts have become even more frequent since President Hery Rajaonarimampianina came to power a year ago.
According
to Andrianjanaka the violence on Saturday started when residents he
described as "furious" about a new outage "wanted to take [their anger]
out on repair technicians who had come to inspect the damage".
After
the technicians fled, he said, locals burnt car tires to set a utility
pole on fire - leading to the intervention of police and the arrests of
three protesters, including the deceased.
Power cuts on the island
are most frequently the result of the national water and electricity
company Jirama paying suppliers of oil to the nation's power plants
late.
Jirama remains dependent on fossil fuels for electricity
generation, despite Madagascar having the means of adopting
hydroelectric technologies.
Energy Minister Richard Fihenena was
fired two months ago for his inability to solve the problem of power
cuts, and his replacement has still not been named.
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