PUDEMO follows Danish municipal elections
Kenworthy News Media, 22 November 2013
“I am surprised that Danish political parties are always looking for
consensus. The ownership and respect for the process by the Danish people shows
– why can’t we learn from that. We come from the old British political system
where we are always contesting.” The President of Swaziland’s largest political
party, the People’s United Democratic Movement, Mario Masuku, is speaking from
a polling station in Gladsaxe, a suburb of Denmark’s capital, Copenhagen,
writes Kenworthy
News Media.
Together with PUDEMO’s Organising Secretary, Wonder Mkhonta, he visited
Denmark this week to follow the municipal elections. The two Swazis were
invited by the Danish Institute for Parties and Democracy and the Danish
political party the Red-Green Alliance.
They come from Swaziland, a corrupt and poverty-stricken absolute
monarchy, where King Mswati III rules with an iron-fist, and where everyone who
questions his rule is deemed to be a terrorist. Something that Masuku and
Mkhonta have personally experienced on several occasions, where they have been
harassed and brutalised by police or locked up for as long as a year on
spurious charges of terrorism or possession of political pamphlets, only to be
released after farcical court sessions.
During their stay Masuku and Mkhonta met with several Danish
politicians, including Copenhagen deputy Mayor for Social Issues Mikkel
Warming, Gladsaxe Mayor Karin Søjberg Holst, and Danish MP for the Red Green
Alliance Nikolaj Villumsen, and followed the election process from the opening
of the polls to the counting of ballots.
And the two Swazis were impressed with what they saw. “The life of the
Danish people is rooted at the local political level, says Masuku. “The
elections are well-organised, transparent, accountable, without animosity
towards other people’s parties, and there is no corruption or very little,
because all the political parties are committed to working together.”
“In Swaziland, on the other hand, the local authorities do not have the
capacity to implement their own policies because the king is in control of
everything,” he continues. “It is impossible to implement anything even at the
local level.”
But as Masuku discussed with the Danish politicians, transplanting a
democratic system and tradition from one country, such as Denmark, to another,
such as Swaziland, is not a straightforward process. “The problem of comparing
Denmark and Swaziland is that Denmark is a democracy and Swaziland is a
dictatorship. We cannot copy-paste all from the Danish system,” he insisted.
“One of the things that have made the Danish system and political
environment strong is the social welfare system,” Mario Masuku concludes.
“The people in Denmark believe in this system they live it, and it is part and
parcel of Denmark. I believe we need something like this in Swaziland.”
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