Swazi youth
congress demands release of political prisoners
Kenworthy News Media February 14, 2013
The Swaziland Youth Congress is to launch a campaign for
the unconditional release of its President, Bheki Dlamini and other political
prisoners on February 16, Kenworthy News Media reports.
Bheki Dlamini is charged under the Suppression of Terrorism Act with planting petrol bombs in
police officers and MP’s houses, a charge that he, SWAYOCO and the democratic
movement in Swaziland deny. He has been in jail since June 2010.
“We remain convinced that these comrades are innocent, if
anything they are guilty of demanding sustainable jobs for the youth, education
for all and the unbanning of political parties. Their resistance and refusal to
betray the people in the face of continued harassment, intimidation, isolation
and incarceration makes us to fight with more vigor and renewed energy for
their release,” SWAYOCO said in a National Excecutive meeting statement
released Wednesday.
As has been the claim of many other political prisoners
in Swaziland, Bheki Dlamini says that he was tortured by the police in order to
make him confess. “For over an hour, or even more, I would be suffocated by use
of a rubber tube, plastic bag and surgical gloves. One officer carried a jar
full of water that he spilt onto my face each time the suffocating tools were
momentarily moved. I was suffocated to the extent that I soiled myself and I
was in no position to deny anything I was told to admit,” Bheki Dlamini told
the Times of Swaziland in 2010.
Swaziland ratified the United Nations
Convention Against Torture in 2004. Nevertheless, there have been many subsequent
reports of torture and mistreatment by Swaziland’s police. Amnesty
International reported in 2011, that “severe beatings and suffocation torture”
were “persistent forms of ill-treatment” in police custody in Swaziland.
Amnesty also specifically mentioned Bheki Dlamini’s
torture by the police in its 2011
annual report. “The court was informed during the hearing that they [Bheki
Dlamini and his co-accused Zonke Dlamini] had been subjected to
suffocation torture and other ill-treatment in police custody following their
arrests.”
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