During World War I, the governor general of the colony, Hubert Garbit, organised the mobilisation of the Malagasy population. A first contingent of
Tirailleurs malgaches was sent to France in October 1915, followed by five others in 1916. Like their
Tirailleurs indochinois counterparts from French Indochina, the
Tirailleurs malgaches battalions were initially employed behind the lines in guard, depot and factory-worker duties, rather than being deployed in a fighting role. A total of 26 battalions were formed between 1916 and 1918. These were garrisoned mainly at the camps of
Fréjus and
Puget-sur-Argens in the Var, and most were dissolved in 1918, with around 15,000 men being transferred to the artillery. Three battalions performed rear echelon duties with the
Armée d'Orient (1915–1919) on the
Macedonian front. The
12e bataillon de tirailleurs malgaches was the only battalion to be awarded the
Fourragère of the
Croix de guerre 1914–1918 (France) for three unit citations. Up until 22 July 1918, it formed part of the highly decorated
1st Moroccan Infantry Division. 45,863 Malagasys served in the ranks of the French Army (including 41,355 in combat roles). Of these 10,000 were incorporated into heavy artillery regiments. A total of 3,101 Malagasy soldiers were killed or reported missing and 1,835 injured. ==Post WWI==