impeached president – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 16 Oct 2025 15:24:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png impeached president – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Impeached President confirms he fled Madagascar as new leader claims ‘not a coup’ https://artifex.news/article70171795-ece/ Thu, 16 Oct 2025 15:24:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70171795-ece/ Read More “Impeached President confirms he fled Madagascar as new leader claims ‘not a coup’” »

]]>

Malagasy military base welcomes Colonel Michael Randrianirina after he says he takes power during a nationwide youth-led protest over frequent power outages and water shortages, in Antananarivo, Madagascar, October 14, 2025.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Madagascar’s new leader insisted on Thursday (October 16, 2025) that a military power grab after the army joined weeks of demonstrations was “not a coup”, as ousted President Andry Rajoelina confirmed he had fled the country days earlier.

Colonel Michael Randrianirina from the mutinied CAPSAT military contingent has faced international criticism after the army announced Tuesday it had taken power moments after parliament voted to impeach Mr. Rajoelina.

Mr. Randrianirina is set to be sworn in on Friday as transitional President and has promised elections within two years and a civilian government.

“A coup is when soldiers enter the presidential palace with weapons, they shoot, there is bloodshed… This is not a coup,” Mr. Randrianirina told journalists.

The approval of the country’s top court on Tuesday of his appointment showed the takeover “follows the legal process”, he said.

“Madagascar has not chosen a military regime,” he said. “The government belongs to civilians. The presidential council is also composed of military and civilians.”

Mr. Rajoelina, meanwhile, confirmed for the first time that he had fled Madagascar between October 11 and 12, the same weekend CAPSAT soldiers announced they would stand with the youth-led protest movement and joined them in the streets.

He left after “explicit and extremely serious threats were made against the life of the Head of State”, according to a statement late Wednesday sent to AFP that did not reveal his whereabouts.

Media reports said the 51-year-old was evacuated on Sunday aboard a French military plane that took him to the French island of Reunion from where he travelled to Dubai where he has a home.

In a televised national address on Monday, Mr. Rajoelina said he had taken refuge in a “safe place” in fear of his life but gave no details.

On Tuesday, he issued a decree to dissolve the National Assembly as it prepared to vote to impeach him for desertion of duty, but parliamentarians went ahead with the vote anyway.

Mr. Rajoelina, who first came to power after a military-backed coup in 2009, accused the National Assembly of colluding with the army to remove him from office.

His office said on Wednesday the constitutional court’s decision to appoint the CAPSAT commander to take over was riddled with procedural illegalities and risked destabilising the former French colony, which has a turbulent political past.

‘Behind-the-scenes negotiations’

Madagascar is the latest of several former French colonies to have fallen under military control since 2020, after coups in Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Gabon and Guinea.

The upheaval started with youth-led demonstrations on September 25 over lack of water and energy that were violently repressed. The United Nations said 22 people were killed in the first days, but this was disputed by Rajoelina’s government.

On October 11, CAPSAT declared it would “refuse orders to shoot” at protesters, joined later by the gendarmerie.

While the Gen Z movement that initiated the protests has welcomed the military’s intervention, the swift takeover has drawn international alarm.

The United Nations expressed concern at an “unconstitutional” takeover and the African Union announced Wednesday it had suspended Madagascar immediately.

Mr. Randrianirina said Thursday that the African Union’s reaction was “normal” but there would be “behind-the-scenes negotiations”, as well as discussions with the SADC regional bloc, which has sent in a fact-finding mission.

He has pledged elections in 18 to 24 months and told local media that consultations were under way to appoint a prime minister.

Mr. Randrianirina had long been a vocal critic of Rajoelina’s administration and was reportedly imprisoned for several months in 2023 for plotting a coup.

“We are now going to work hard and very quickly so as not to disappoint the people,” he said Thursday. “We are going to change many things and meet their expectations.”



Source link

]]>
South Korea Court Re-Issues Arrest Warrant Against Impeached President Yoon https://artifex.news/south-korea-court-re-issues-arrest-warrant-against-impeached-president-yoon-7419982/ Tue, 07 Jan 2025 11:31:50 +0000 https://artifex.news/south-korea-court-re-issues-arrest-warrant-against-impeached-president-yoon-7419982/ Read More “South Korea Court Re-Issues Arrest Warrant Against Impeached President Yoon” »

]]>



Seoul, South Korea:

South Korean anti-graft investigators secured a new court-ordered arrest warrant Tuesday for impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol, whose failed martial law bid threw the country into turmoil. The former star prosecutor has refused questioning three times after his bungled December 3 martial law decree plunged South Korea into its worst political crisis in decades.

As anti-graft officials and police got their fresh warrant from the same court that issued the first order, Yoon remained holed up in his residence surrounded by hundreds of guards preventing his detention.

“The arrest warrant re-requested for the suspect Yoon was issued today in the afternoon,” the Joint Investigation Headquarters said in a statement. 

Seoul Western District Court declined to confirm when contacted by AFP.

The Corruption Investigation Office (CIO), which is leading the probe into the president, has kept secret the length of the warrant it requested after the initial seven-day one expired.

If investigators are able to detain Yoon, he would become the first sitting South Korean president to be arrested.

But they would only have 48 hours to either request another arrest warrant, in order to keep him in detention, or be forced to release him.

The anti-graft officials have sought more time and help because of the difficulties they have faced, including being met by hundreds of security forces when they entered Yoon’s presidential residence on Friday.

Yoon is being investigated on charges of insurrection and, if formally arrested and convicted, faces prison or, at worst, the death penalty. 

His lawyers repeatedly said the initial warrant was “unlawful”, pledging to take further legal action against it. 

They have argued the CIO lacks the authority to investigate because insurrection is not included in the list of offences it can probe.

The vibrant East Asian democracy has found itself in uncharted territory regardless of the outcome of Yoon’s case — its sitting president will have been arrested, or he would have evaded court-ordered detention.

‘Fortress’

CIO chief Oh Dong-woon apologised on Tuesday for the failed first arrest attempt, saying he was “heartbroken”.

“I must express my sincere apologies to the public for the failure to execute the arrest warrant due to the security measures taken by the Presidential Security Service,” he told lawmakers at the National Assembly.

Yoon’s presidential guards refused to budge during a six-hour standoff at his residence on Friday.

The CIO was set up less than four years ago and has fewer than 100 staff, who are yet to prosecute a single case.

“Naturally, they have no prior experience with arrests, let alone something as significant as arresting the president,” said Yun Bok-nam, president of Lawyers for a Democratic Society, who is not involved in the investigation.

South Korea’s opposition Democratic Party told AFP on Monday it had submitted a legal complaint against acting president Choi Sang-mok for “dereliction of duty” after he failed to intervene as they requested.

South Korea’s Constitutional Court has slated January 14 for the start of Yoon’s impeachment trial, which would proceed in his absence if he does not attend.

Local media reported that he was likely to appear on the opening day, but Yoon’s lawyer told AFP his appearance was still “undecided”.

Former presidents Roh Moo-hyun and Park Geun-hye never appeared for their impeachment trials in 2004 and 2016-2017 respectively.

The court has up to 180 days to determine whether to dismiss Yoon or restore him as president.

Opposition party lawmaker Youn Kun-young told local media Yoon’s residence was “turning into a fortress”, claiming guards were installing barbed wire and vehicle barricades.

Many supporters have also camped outside his residence despite freezing weather.

While officials have been unable to get to Yoon, the joint investigation team has gone after top military officials behind the martial law plan.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)




Source link

]]>