In 1932 in Tamatave he married Laguet, a lady of European and Réunion Creole heritage, and they had six children. The family lived in Fianarantsoa, Tuléar, Tananarive, Mananara, Île Sainte-Marie and lastly Tamatave, where he was posted in September 1946, after the birth of his son Jacques.[3] Sylla helped form Parti des déshérités de Madagascar (PADESM), and he entered politics when he was elected as a provincial councillor on 30 March 1952.[2][3] In the same year he became Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Tourism.[2] His son, Jacques Sylla, served as Prime Minister from 2002 to 2007.
Career
In 1953 he was elected as a councillor to the Assembly of the French Union, and he ran on the list of "Entente franco-malgache dan l'Union francaise". On 28 August 1956, whilst attending a reunion in Tamatave, he became president of the local chapter of the UDSM, which had been formed by Norbert Zafimahova.[3]
The Madagascar Cabinet held an emergency meeting after the crash, and it was announced that Sylla would be given a state funeral.[7] Sylla was succeeded as foreign minister by Jacques Rabemananjara on 22 August 1967 after President Tsiranana reshuffled his cabinet as a result of Sylla's death.[3][8]
References
^"Forum" (in French). LMKService. Archived from the original on 2010-06-07. Retrieved 2009-10-19.