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Vote offer rejected in Madagascar | Vote offer rejected in Madagascar |
(20 minutes later) | |
Madagascar opposition leader Andry Rajoelina has rejected President Marc Ravalomanana's offer of a referendum to solve the six-week political crisis. | Madagascar opposition leader Andry Rajoelina has rejected President Marc Ravalomanana's offer of a referendum to solve the six-week political crisis. |
Mr Rajoelina, a 34-year-old former disc jockey, said he and his supporters would take the presidential palace in the capital Antananarivo on Monday. | |
Earlier two blasts, suspected to have been mortars, struck about 2km (1.2 miles) from the presidential palace. | |
A presidential spokesman said they were designed to intimidate his supporters. | |
The power struggle between the president and opposition leader has triggered a military mutiny, deadly protests and looting which have left at least 100 people dead in the Indian Ocean island since January. | |
The army, parts of which have stopped taking orders from Mr Ravalomanana's government but have not explicitly allied with Mr Rajoelina, told Reuters news agency the pre-dawn blasts had nothing to do with them. | |
The African Union is due to hold an emergency meeting on Monday to discuss what it calls the "worsening situation" in Madagascar. | |
'Not interested' | |
The BBC's Jonah Fisher in the capital Antananarivo says the president's referendum offer is being seen by the opposition as a desperate last roll of the dice and has spurred them on to intensify their demands that he step down. | The BBC's Jonah Fisher in the capital Antananarivo says the president's referendum offer is being seen by the opposition as a desperate last roll of the dice and has spurred them on to intensify their demands that he step down. |
"We are not interested in this referendum," Mr Rajoelina told reporters on Monday. | |
A referendum needs time to be organised and the country cannot afford to wait under such difficult circumstances Colonel Andre NdriarijaonaArmy chief Crisis isolates president | |
Mr Rajoelina says the president is a tyrant who misspends public money, while Mr Ravolamanana's supporters call his young rival a troublemaker. | Mr Rajoelina says the president is a tyrant who misspends public money, while Mr Ravolamanana's supporters call his young rival a troublemaker. |
On Saturday, Mr Rajoelina again told his rival to step down and declared himself president, appointing a "prime minister" and "transition government". | On Saturday, Mr Rajoelina again told his rival to step down and declared himself president, appointing a "prime minister" and "transition government". |
Appearing at an open-air Sunday service attended by 5,000 supporters outside the presidential palace, a defiant Mr Ravalomanana said: "I will never resign." | |
"Power belongs to the people and it's only fair to organise a referendum," the president said, promising a "free and transparent" vote. | |
Colonel Andre Ndriarijaona - who last week led a mutiny that ousted the army chief - reportedly said a plebiscite would take too long. | |
"A referendum needs time to be organised and the country cannot afford to wait under such difficult circumstances," he told Reuters. | |
Several thousand opposition supporters attended another church service on Sunday in the central Antananarivo square that has become the focal point of anti-government demonstrations. | |
Democratically elected to a second term in office in 2006, Mr Ravalomanana has previously said he wants to remain in office until his mandate expires in 2011. |