Swazi teachers
continue strike despite regime intimidation
Stiffkitten blog July 29, 2012
“The struggle for the public servants is still on. We had
a SNAT [Swaziland National Union of Teachers] mass meeting on Friday and the
teachers resolved to press on for yet another week,” Swaziland National Union
of Teachers Secretary General, Muzi Mhlanga, told Africa Contact yesterday.
The public employees have been on strike for five weeks
now, demanding a pay rise of 4.5 per cent, well below the rate of inflation in
Swaziland and a mere fraction of the 30 per cent pay rise that Swaziland’s
parliamentarians have given themselves.
On top of this, Swaziland’s royal family has an annual
allowance of 20 million Euros and its absolute monarch, King Mswati III, has
increased spending on his security forces and continues to spend lavishly on
everything from private jets, sending his wives on a recreational trip to Las
Vegas, and unnecessary prestige projects.
Swaziland is subsequently on the brink of economic ruin
with growth rates plummeting, also due to the overall economic mismanagement of
King Mswati’s government, which he in effect controls. Over two thirds of the
population lives in absolute poverty, half the population receive some sort of
food aid and the country has the highest HIV and Tuberculosis rates in the
world.
Until now the strikers have been met by regime threats of
salary reductions or being sacked, riot police and armed forces intimidation
and beatings, tear gas and rubber bullets. Probably because the regime also
understands that the strike is about more than a simple pay rise.
“In my opinion the teachers have broken all the barriers
and have given all pro-democrats a challenge in that we should never give up
but be determined so that we achieve our goal of democratisation of our
country,” student activist Sibusiso Nhlabatsi tells Africa Contact.
“The teachers have refused to bow down to the threat of
the brutal regime. I believe that with the enthusiasm and courage the teachers
have shown we can push [Swaziland’s feudal] tinkhundla [system] to the chasm
and replace it with a new system. They say a revolution will not be televised:
the Teachers in Swaziland have started it. We believe that democracy in
Swaziland is certain.”
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