Swaziland is training police officers from Equatorial
Guinea, one of the few countries in Africa with arguably a human rights record as
bad as King Mswati III’s kingdom.
Thirty cadet officers are in Matsapha for the start of a
course scheduled to last 12 months. Swaziland has signed an agreement with Equatorial
Guinea to train police officers for five years.
Equatorial Guinea has an appalling human rights record committed
by its police and other state security forces.
The US State Department, in a report on Equatorial Guineapublished in May 2012, revealed, ‘Corruption and impunity continued to be
problems. Security forces extorted money from citizens and immigrants at police
checkpoints. There was no internal investigation unit within the police, and
mechanisms to investigate allegations of abuse were poorly developed.’
It added, ‘security forces sometimes committed abuses
with impunity. The government did not maintain effective internal or external
mechanisms to investigate security force abuses.’
Lawyers in the country report arbitrary arrests. ‘Lawyers
did not have access to police stations and could not contact detainees while
they were held there; police superintendents when interviewed stated they did
not see the need for or advisability of such access.
‘Police raids on immigrant communities, local stores, and
restaurants increased in the period preceding the African Union Summit in June
[2011].
‘Reliable sources reported that many legal as well as
irregular immigrants were abused, extorted, or detained during such raids.
Police occasionally used excessive force to detain and deport detainees, and
almost all foreign embassies in the country criticized the government during
the year for its harassment, abuse, extortion, and detention without
representation of foreign nationals. Many detainees complained about the bribes
required for release from detention.’
‘Several members of the largest opposition political
party, the Convergence Party for Social Democracy (CPDS), were arrested, briefly
detained, and released.’
Swazi Commissioner of Police Isaac Magagula ‘expressedpleasure’ at an opening ceremony that Swaziland and Equatorial Guinean were
working closely together. He said the two countries’ police forces needed to collaborate
more.
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