ANTANANARIVO, March 19 (Xinhua) -- Andry Nirina Rajoelina, Madagascar's newly-installed president, declared here on Thursday that the Indian Ocean Island country would never separate itself from France.
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Andy Rajoelina, the newly appointed Madagascar's president, speaks to reporters in front of the Presidential Palace in Antananarivo, capital of Madagascar, March 19, 2009. Madagascar's transitional government decided on March 19 to suspend the functioning of the two houses of the parliament, the National Assembly and the Senate.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Following his meeting with the new French ambassador
to Madagascar, Jean-Marc Chataigner, who arrived here last Wednesday, Rajoelina
told the Media that Madagascar and its former ruler had a common history.
"We can never underestimate our relation with
France," added Rajoelina, who was legalized by the High Constitutional Court
(HCC)on Wednesday as president of the country together with the transitional
government he announced early last month.
Jean-Marc Chataigner, the first French ambassador to
arrive to its former colony in the last seven months, paid a courtesy call to
Rajoelina Thursday morning, during which they discussed the management of his
transitional government as well as the strengthening of relationship between the
two countries.
Chataigner, received at the international airport
here upon his arrival by Rajoelina, is also the first foreign diplomat met by
Rajoelina since the HCC legalized his presidency a day earlier.
Relationship between Antananarivo and Paris has been
worsening since 2002, when Marc Ravalomanana took over as president of the
country following a 6-month stalemate with his predecessor, Didier Ratsiraka,
who has been living in exile in France ever since.
After his meeting with the French ambassador,
Rajoelina called a meeting of his transitional government, during which it
decided to suspend the functioning of the two-house parliament, the National
Assembly and the Senate.
Spokesman and Minister of Post and High Technology of
the transitional government, the transitional government, informed the media
that 10 ministers, appointed by Rajoelina early last month, were ratified under
a decree signed by the president.
At his first press conference as president of the
country, Rajoelina said that the purpose of the cabinet meeting was to "discuss
strategies on how the transitional government should be functioning in a limited
time".
To a question about international reaction on his
legality to take over presidency of the country, he said that "all the people in
the world would agree on what the High Constitutional Court has agreed".
"The transitional government has many duties,
including the reconciliation between the armed forces, the politicians, the
businessmen and the church," he said.