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Consulta le FAQAbout Zo
Zo Andrianjafy is a Madagascar-based photojournalist specializing in high-stakes social, political, and cultural documentation. Since 2023, he has served as a primary contributor for Thomson Reuters, providing international-standard coverage of Madagascar’s most critical news events, including the 2025 national protests and significant political transitions. His work is defined by a unique combination of HEFAT-certified field safety (Hostile Environment Training) and deep-access storytelling. Zo’s recent long-term projects range from documenting the historic repatriation of royal remains in the Menabe region to exploring the frontline tensions between traditional land use and contemporary environmental pressures. Trained in the VII Academy Visual Journalism Program and the Market Photo Workshop, Zo’s practice adheres to the highest global standards of editorial ethics and technical precision. He is a member of the Mira Photo Collective, dedicated to advancing documentary practice within the Indian Ocean region.
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On 6 September 2025, the presumed skulls of King Toera of Menabe and his two royal guards departed from Belo-Tsiribihina to reach Ankaranka, the ancestral site of Ambiky. This is where King Toera once lived and reigned, and where the massacre of 5,000 people and his own death took place. There, the relics will be interred in his tomb, alongside the rest of his body. The procession was greeted by women performing traditional Daba music, while village sages, believed to be spirit-guided, offered blessings to all who sought them, marking a deeply spiritual moment of return and reconciliation with the land of origin.
REUTERS/Zo Andrianjafy
Looters push a shopping cart past a burning building during a night of chaos in the early stages of the uprising during a demonstration to denounce economic hardship and governance, in Antananarivo, Madagascar September 25, 2025. REUTERS/Zo Andrianjafy