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Madagascar Executes First Surgical Castration Sentence for Child Rapist Under New Law

For the first time in Madagascar’s history, a court has ordered surgical castration for a convicted sex offender, marking a landmark application of a controversial law passed over a year ago.

The 24-year-old man was found guilty of raping and murdering a six-year-old girl in March 2024. He lured the child to his home, where he beat, raped, strangled her, and burned her with cigarette butts. The court sentenced him to surgical castration and life imprisonment with hard labour.

Didier Razafindralambo, Attorney General at the Court of Appeal, described the ruling as “a strong and significant response from the justice system, intended also to serve as a warning to anyone with similar malicious intentions.”

The justice ministry reported 133 cases of rape of minors in January 2024 alone, averaging more than four per day—figures that have driven authorities to implement harsher penalties.

Surgical castration, which involves the permanent removal of testicles or ovaries to halt the production of sex hormones, is extremely rare and controversial. It has previously been applied in countries like Germany, the Czech Republic, the U.S. state of Louisiana, and Kaduna State in Nigeria.

Madagascar’s Justice Minister, Landy Mbolatiana Randriamanantenasoa, defended the law, saying it was necessary in response to the alarming rise in child rape cases. Under the new legislation:

Offenders who rape children under 10 will face mandatory surgical castration.

Those convicted of raping children aged 10–13 may face either surgical or chemical castration.

Rape of minors aged 14–17 will be punished with chemical castration.

However, the new law has ignited strong opposition. Madagascar’s Catholic bishops issued a statement condemning castration as “torture” and a violation of human dignity, saying, “The human body, as the work of God, is sacred… So nothing and no one has authority over it, not even the law.”

Rights groups, including Amnesty International, also criticised the measure. At the time of the bill’s introduction, Amnesty described the punishment as “cruel, inhuman and degrading,” arguing that it violates both Madagascar’s constitutional protections and international human rights standards.

But supporters say the law is necessary to confront a culture of sexual violence. Jessica Lolonirina Nivoseheno of Women Break the Silence, a group fighting rape culture in Madagascar, told RFI, “Sexual violence is normalised here. The punishment is a way of telling potential offenders that there are consequences for their crime.”

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