An Evening In Antananarivo

Madagascar, the fourth largest island in the world, just off the east coast of Africa, was uninhabited until two thousand years ago. It has always been in the crosscurrents of international trade.

An Evening In Antananarivo

The school office called to say they had to send students home early, due to the imminent political rallies in the city square. The unrest in the country was growing day by day, with people congregating in the thousands, their united voices stronger than ever before, yet so far no-one had been physically harmed. My mind has been instilled with Shakespeare’s wisdom and the consequences of the fury of a mob and I am, therefore, worried. The Residence was at a distance of some forty kilometres away from the International School and the city centre, my heart begins to race. I try DC’s number… busy! I try the mission numbers, one by one… busy, busy, busy! I cannot get through to the driver either. It just gets to you. Far away from the homeland, in the middle of nowhere, such moments are really distressing. Then Suren rings. “Ma, I’ll have to go to Dad’s office. Okay?” I nod into the phone. Yes, thank you, thank you, the Ones above! I need not have been so panic-stricken. Madagascar is a peaceful country and its people the nicest you can imagine. Still, this unusual political unrest is worrisome.

Our arrival here had been delayed for over a month, due to the airport being shut down after a failed attempted coup. We finally did disembark in the country, but amidst political turmoil. DC was asked to present credentials the very next day. Thankfully, I could iron his bundgala, with my faithful travelling iron, that had traversed the oceans with me, all the way from the isthmus of Panama, a decade earlier. As it turns out, DC is the last envoy to present credentials to the now endangered President. The country is in a state of flux as the new President settles into his proclaimed role and the former President is swiftly flown out of the country. The supermarket shelves run bare. Petrol is scarce. Residents resort to panic buying. Manic moments. Mineral water, medicines, rolls of toilet paper, cooking oil… everything flies off the counters. Petrol is being sold in half litre water bottles, even cooking oil bottles, at exorbitant prices. A sense of unease prevails in the city.