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Sunday 24 July 2022

Swaziland Newsletter No. 736 – 22 July 2022

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 736 – 22 July 2022

News from and about Swaziland, compiled by Global Aktion, Denmark (www.globalaktion.dk) in collaboration with Swazi Media Commentary (www.swazimedia.blogspot.com), and sent to all with an interest in Swaziland - free of charge.

Another SADC summit to discuss a national dialogue in Eswatini is cancelled

By Peter Fabricius, Daily Maverick (South Africa), 19 July 2022

SOURCE

 

Regional efforts to resolve the crisis in Eswatini hit another major stumbling block this week when a second summit intended to discuss a national political dialogue in the troubled kingdom was cancelled at the last moment. 

Ministers and officials had been meeting for days to prepare the summit of the security organ of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) for this Thursday, which would have been chaired by President Cyril Ramaphosa, who currently heads the security organ. 

Sources said Eswatini’s King Mswati had at the last moment said he could only participate virtually, but the other members of the SADC security organ troika, including Ramaphosa, Namibian President Hage Geingob and Botswana’s President Mokgweetsi Masisi insisted on a face-to-face meeting with Mswati on such an important issue. 

And so the summit was officially “postponed”, but with no indication of whether it would take place later, or when. Swazi opposition forces are furious and have demanded that SADC step up the pressure on Mswati to negotiate.  

Previous pull-out

In April, Mswati also pulled out of a planned SADC summit to discuss the national political dialogue, which he had agreed to in principle in a meeting with Ramaphosa in Eswatini last November.

Just before the April summit was due, he told South Africa that he was not yet ready to attend the meeting as he first needed to consult further with his own people about the draft terms of reference — or draft framework — for the national political dialogue that SADC had produced.  

It seems very likely that he pulled out of this week’s summit for the same reason. The “Draft Framework for Inclusive Multi-Stakeholder National Dialogue in the Kingdom of Eswatini” provides for Mswati and his government to hold an “inclusive” dialogue with all political stakeholders. It strongly suggests this should include political parties which are now banned.

Mswati and his ministers suggested over the past few months that they would only enter into a national dialogue within the “Sibaya” format; the traditional forum where the king engages with his subjects in his palace and on his terms.

The political and civil society opposition in Eswatini made it clear that they would not participate in a Sibaya as they believe it is a format for a monologue and allows the king to control the discussion. They demanded a proper dialogue under neutral SADC supervision.

SADC’s draft framework accepts the role of Sibaya and the Eswatini Parliament as a basis for the dialogue, but proposes going further. Officials said Mswati clearly feared that he would lose control of the process if this happened.

SADC criticism

The SADC framework was also sharply critical of Mswati’s government for failing to address many of the issues and grievances that erupted in the worst-yet violence in the country in June last year when about 100 people, mostly protesters, were killed and many government and business buildings were destroyed or damaged.  

It was this violence that prompted SADC to become involved and to send several delegations to Eswatini to meet the government, the opposition and other players last year to discuss a way out of the growing political crisis. Among the grievances that sparked the violence was the death of student Thabani Nkomonye — allegedly at the hands of the security forces — as well as a government ban on Swazi citizens petitioning their members of parliament over issues.

The government arrested two MPs who had supported the right of their constituents to petition them and charged a third MP who had fled the country. The violence continued to simmer and then flared up again in October last year.

Ramaphosa, acting as the chair of SADC’s security organ, then sent a SADC mission led by former Cabinet minister Jeff Radebe to investigate. It found there had been “no substantive progress” by the government to implement its commitments to investigate the deaths and injuries in the June 2021 violence. It also found that the delivery of petitions to MPs by their constituents remained banned.

Radebe’s delegation reported an “overwhelming call from stakeholders and the international community” for a national dialogue, but little support for Sibaya as the appropriate structure for this dialogue.

SADC’s draft framework was produced in February. It envisaged a timetable for the national dialogue, starting with an announcement in April by Eswatini’s prime minister to Parliament or to the nation, of the start of a “pre-dialogue” in which the participants in the dialogue proper would be identified.

During May, a Multi-Stakeholder National Dialogue Committee would have been established, would have begun its plenary assembly and would have adopted and implemented its decisions or recommendations. None of this has happened.

Call to increase pressure on Mswati

After Thursday’s summit was cancelled, Thulani Maseko, the head of Eswatini’s Multi-Stakeholder Forum which is coordinating political and civil society forces pushing for a proper national political dialogue, called on SADC to increase pressure on Mswati to negotiate.

“It is clear that we are dealing with a king and government that are self-serving,” he told Daily Maverick

“A leader and government that have neither regard nor respect for the people that he rules with an iron fist. He also is treating the leadership of the region and the world with sheer and utter contempt. He is rendering SADC as an ineffective organ.

“While we, the people of Swaziland, are determined to continue the struggle for our liberation, the fundamental question is: what will SADC do to call the king to his proper senses?

“It appears that the king is equally committed to let the country slip into a violent civil conflict and to destabilise the region.

“Tomorrow we will continue with our planned march to the SA High Commission [in Eswatini] to deliver a petition to impress on the SADC organ’s chair to be decisive in dealing with the Swaziland question.

“The King and his tinkhundla [traditional government] regime must not be allowed to hold everybody [to] ransom. We appeal to the SADC leaders and the global community to step up pressure towards future dialogue.” DM

 

Four police officers charged over Thabani’s death

By Welcome Dlamini, Times of eSwatini, 17 July 2022

SOURCE

 

MBABANE – The names Mohammed Bouazizi and Thabani Nkomonye have something in common – they both catalysed political unrests.

For Bouazizi, it was the Arab Spring of pro-democracy protests that took place in the Middle East and North Africa in 2010 and 2011; for Nkomonye, it was nationwide protests that escalated into Eswatini’s political unrest.Tunisian Fruit and vegetable vendor Bouazizi, 26 years old in 2010, set himself on fire in the town of Sidi Bouzid and triggered the Arab Spring, University of Eswatini law student Nkomonye, aged 25 in 2021, died under mysterious circumstances following a traffic accident at night and a #JusticeForThabani movement began, as blame was apportioned on the police for his death. It is now just over a year since May 8, 2021, when Nkomonye is believed to have died, and the Royal Eswatini Police Service (REPS) has since acted on this death.

An impeccable source within the REPS revealed that as per the recommendation of Coroner Nonhlanhla Dlamini, disciplinary action has commenced against the four police officers who were on duty on the night of Nkomonye’s death and they all face a charge of negligence. Dlamini presided over the inquest into the circumstances surrounding the death of Nkomonye and further compiled a report of the findings.The officers who have been charged are: Constable Bhoncozi Kunene, who was the investigator of the road traffic accident; Constable Isaac Msibi, who attended the accident with Kunene; another officer identified as Thusi, who was part of the team that attended the accident; and Sergeant Ntombikayise Sithole, who was the senior officer on duty that night. Kunene, Msibi and Thusi are from the Matsapha traffic police department and they attended the scene of the accident on May 8, 2021 and towed Nkomonye’s motor vehicle to the Matsapha police station, where it was kept until his body was discovered at the scene of the accident five days later (May 13, 2021).

The coroner made the following recommendation, which was one of four: “Administrative disciplinary action should be taken against all the officers who were involved in this matter, to answer for their failure to follow procedure and for their negligence.” The highly-placed source said it was now expected that the four officers would now appear before a tribunal that consists of the police executive, where their matter will be dealt with. Chief Police Information and Communications Officer Superintendent Phindile Vilakati did not refute the information that the officers had since been charged. “The National Commissioner is working on the recommendations as articulated by the Coroner. Reports will be submitted to a relevant body if need be,” she said.   

For more of this report, click here.

 

Solidarity forces spokesperson: No member arrested for shooting police officers.

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 18 July 2022

SOURCE

 

MBABANE: No member of the Swaziland International Solidarity Forces(SISF)arrested in connection with the ongoing shooting of police officers.

This was confirmed by the SISF Spokesperson when speaking to this Swaziland News on Monday morning.

“We can confirm that no member of the Solidarity Forces has been arrested in connection with the ongoing shooting of police officers. Such false information is meant to intimidate the people so that the police could be seen working trying to control the situation, all our members are safe and the operation is ongoing. What they are trying do now is to arrest members of the public and label them ‘solidarity forces”, said the Spokesperson whose name cannot be revealed for ethical reasons.

The Times of eSwatini reported that two people were arrested in connection with the killing of police officers adding that one officer who was killed, Bongnkosi Dlamini asked for prayers not to meet Solidarity Forces on his way to work.

Police Spokesperson Superintendent Phindile Vilakati had not responded at the time of compiling this report.

On another note, the Commander of the Solidarity Forces said the operation was continuing well adding that even the censored media was beginning to acknowledge the presence of Solidarity Forces.

“I read a front page of the Times, they reported that a police officers asked for prayers not to meet Solidarity Forces. So now they know that Solidarity Forces exist, I thought, the newspaper would say, he asked for prayers not to meet unknown people because they have been attributing the killings to unknown people. Uyabona nawucatseka umuntfu umkhipha lishashadi, leti timphawu tekutsi seliyaphuma lelishashadi”, he said.

The Commander of the Solidarity Forces further warned all police officers not to arrest any of their members to avoid putting themselves at risk. 

“Arrest, torture, prosecute Solidarity and Ground Forces at your own peril. Anyone who will arrest, torture, prosecute or even kill a member of our forces will do so at their own peril because our response to such provocation would not only be firm but it would be decisive,” said the Commander.

The ongoing shooting and killing of police officers and soldiers comes after King Mswati unleashed his security forces to kill dozens of civilians merely for demanding democratic reforms.

 

MPs call for dialogue to end violence

By Sifiso Dlamini, eSwatini Observer, 20 July 2022

SOURCE

 

Lobamba - Members of Parliament have unanimously pleaded with the Prime Minister, Cleopas Dlamini to speedily facilitate the much anticipated national dialogue.

The legislators are of the view that the dialogue would bring the much needed calm in the country.

They have also indicated that they were now living in constant fear for their lives as they could be victimised.

The PM, however, stated that the dialogue would only be called once the situation in the country was conducive.

This was mentioned during the debate of the prime minister's office first quarter performance report yesterday.

While delivering his preamble, the premier made a humble plea to the nation.
He acknowledged that while it was true that the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and unprecedented civil unrest as well as the negative impact of the Russia-Ukraine war continued to tremendously upset economies resulting to closure of businesses, job losses and resultant to an increasing inflation.

“The resultant frustration of our people in particular the youth is understandable, but violence and destruction will never be a solution.”

If anything, this is the time for unity of purpose and collective efforts to address our challenges as a nation,” he said.

Dlamini added that it was imperative that everyone embraced the spirit of peaceful dialogue when not in agreement as opposed to violence.
He said government would announce the dialogue as provided for in the Constitution as soon as the environment was conducive.

The MPs were of the view that government should take the initiative and make the situation conducive for the dialogue.

They further urged the PM to speed up the preparations.

Nkhaba MP Zakhele Magongo was the first to urge government to stand up and be counted.
“I hear the PM saying that the dialogue will only take place once the situation is conducive. Enough member of the public have died and have been laid to rest when will the situation be conducive and who is responsible for facilitating this," he said.

He urged the premier to be proactive and make the situation conducive by facilitating the dialogue.

He said the dialogue was a must have and should be speeded up.

Deputy Speaker, Madala Mhlanga, said this was no longer the same Eswatini he grew up in.
He enquired what the PM was doing to unite the nation as they were now all living in fear of being victimised if they spoke against the ongoing violence.
Lomahasha MP Ndumiso Masimula said the situation was now tense and there was a need to curb the ongoing violence.

Conclusive

“It is now scary and the only way forward is to sit down and talk, find solutions to the challenges we face as a nation. If the situation is not conducive, will we wait for more people to die before we have the dialogue,” he submitted.
He aslo said it was not acceptable to sit and fold their hands while hoping for the situation to be conducive.

Madlangempisi MP, Sibusiso ‘Scorpion’ Nxumalo, said he pitted the PM who came into office during such a difficult period in the country.

He said it was every one's duty to leave the country peaceful as it was before.
Nxumalo said peace and stability was critical and should be promoted.

He also questioned why the Cabinet excluded politicians in finding a solution yet this was a political problem.

Manzini North MP, Macford Sibandze, said all the efforts made would count for nothing if the situation was still not conducive and all were in a state of fear.
Sibandze said the PM should have a caucus with MPs to come up with suggestions for promoting peace and stability in the country.

He said the country was now in a state of emergency, which was now spiralling to a State of war in the country as the police were now unsure if calls for help were genuine or not.
He enquired who was responsible for making the situation conducive and said as politicians they should play their role.  “I do not believe that the situation will just miraculously become conducive and there is a need for a long-term strategy,” he said.

For more of this report, click here.

 

Swazi Lives Matter, Gawuzela asked President Ramaphosa to intervene in eSwatini

By Eugene Dube, Swati Newsweek 20 July, 2022

SOURCE

LONDON - Mduduzi Eric ‘Gawuzela’ Simelane joined Swazis in England in a peaceful protest march to deliver a petition to the South African Embassy in London, UK.

Protestors gathered outside the South African High Commission in London near Trafalgar Square to call on the SADC (South African Development Community) to support their efforts to bring democracy to Eswatini (formerly Swaziland).

The march and petition as organised by Swazi Lives Matter pleaded with the South African government to make representations on behalf of the Swazi people for the Swaziland government to sincerely engage with all stakeholders in a national dialogue to end the political crisis in the country; to stop the violence against unarmed civilians with immediate effect; to comply with the human rights obligations.

The petition further demanded for the unbanning of political parties, the release of all political prisoners and for political exiles to be allowed to return unconditionally.

Reached for a comment Simelane said, “It was one of the best marches the Swazi Lives matter did a great job we managed to deliver a petition.”

 

Communist Party of Swaziland organizer is attacked again as regime turns jittery

By Pavan Kulkarni, Peoples Dispatch, 16 July 2022

SOURCE

 

Early on the morning of Wednesday, July 13, King Mswati III’s police raided the home of Bongi Nkambule, a member of the Communist of Swaziland (CPS), which is banned along with all other political parties in Africa’s last absolute monarchy.

Nkambule, whom the police identify as a key organizer of the pro-democracy movement locally, had already been tortured in custody less than four months ago. When around 30 heavily armed policemen “invaded” the Msunduza township on the outskirts of capital Mbabane at about 6:30 in the morning, he knew he was the target.

“They were misled in the wrong direction when they asked for me. That gave me just enough time to get out of the house and make a run to the forest to escape,” Nkambule told Peoples Dispatch, speaking on phone from a hideout.

“Without showing any search warrant to my wife who demanded it, they then broke into my house and ransacked the whole place. Then they arrested my wife and dragged her to the police station at around 8 am. She was held there in custody, and beaten and harassed for several hours before she was released by 2 in the afternoon,” he said. “She is not safe, they have threatened to come back and kill her.”

The couple have two children – one aged 11 and the other a two-year-old infant. Nkambule used to support his family, laboring as a painter. He had been struggling over the last four months to make ends meet on losing his regular job when his employer got intimidated after he was picked up by the police without a warrant on March 23.

At that time, the police assaulted him for several hours in custody, and then, without pressing any charges, dumped him just outside the capital, with injuries to his arms, legs and head.

Sunset Rallies to symbolize the monarch’s nearing end

“Since then Comrade Bongo had been under continuous surveillance,” CPS International Secretary Pius Vilakati told Peoples Dispatch. Nevertheless, even under surveillance, “he had continued his work as a community organizer in Msunduza and was playing an important role in organizing the Sunset Rallies there.”

To signify to the communities the nearing end of the monarchist reign over Swaziland, which the King has arbitrarily renamed Eswatini, the CPS started organizing what it calls Sunset Rallies in March. Soon after, Nkambule was abducted by the police.

In the four months since, Vilakati said, these rallies have almost become a weekly event. Marches have been held in the townships of Msunduza, Maphala in Mbabane and KaKhoza in Manzini city, the commercial hub of Swaziland. For now, these rallies remain relatively small, mobilizing a hundred or so community members each time.

Nevertheless, Mswati, who had fled his kingdom briefly amid an unprecedented country-wide pro-democracy uprising mid-last year, appears rattled by this increasing willingness of local residents to raise the red flag and call for his overthrow. Slogans “Mswati must Fall!” and “Democracy Now!”, which were promulgated by the CPS years ago, have become a mass cry in the country.

The Msunduza township has attracted much police attention after residents took part in three Sunset Rallies here. Most of the residents are informal laborers who travel to the capital daily in search of work. During the raid on Wednesday, the police also broke into houses of several other community members, claiming to be in search of weapons. As in the several other raids in the recent past, no weapons were found, Vilakati observed.

“While the police claimed to be looking for guns and grenades, ostensibly to be used in an impending armed revolution against Africa’s last absolute monarchy, the true reason for the raid was to instill fear among community members and victimize political activists,” CPS said in a statement.

However, the rallies have not only continued despite these raids, illegal arrests and torture, but have also grown increasingly assertive in the nature of the speeches made publicly at them.

Community-based Security Councils to defend against police ‘invasion’

Addressing a Sunset Rally on June 26 in KaKhoza township in the city of Manzini, the commercial hub of the country, CPS National Organizer Simphiwe Dlamini called for the formation of community-based “Security Councils”. These councils, he said, should inspire “intense fear” in the police “whenever they think of invading communities. The minority regime should not be allowed to rule over us any longer. We’re the majority.”

Speaking to Peoples Dispatch over phone on Friday, June 15, while en route to another Sunset Rally in Macambeni township, about 45 kilometers from the capital, on the outskirts of Piggs Peak town in Hhohho region, Dlamini explained: “What is happening in the country today is that the police never respond to distress calls by people faced with crimes or violence. The only task they undertake in the country is to attack the pro-democracy movement and the communities in which this movement is rooted.”

“The police”, he added, “is no longer a force from which people can expect any security. They are left to defend themselves. So the cadres of the Communist Party, the vanguard of the struggling masses, are working in the communities to unite them and organize to form Security Councils.”

A key task of these Councils, he explained, will be to ensure that “at least one person from every family is on the frontlines of the revolution. Because when police invade communities, they are primarily targeting a few households from which members have taken to the frontlines. It is time now for every household to respond by contributing at least one member to the frontlines to overwhelm the police with numbers.”

Cops? Whistle!!!

The other important task is to organize an alarm and response system. One proposal on how to implement this has received a very positive response from communities, Dlamini explained: “The Security Council should ensure that all community members are carrying whistles. The first person to see armed policemen approaching the community will raise an alarm by blowing his whistle and everyone hearing it will follow up with their own whistles, and it will continue so on.”

This chorus of whistles, he explained, should in itself be a deterrent “because the community is telling the police even before they have arrived that we know you are coming, and we are ready. The police are afraid of this. That is why in all of the recent raids, they avoided detection till the last moment and caught the households they were targeting by surprise. We should not let them have it easy anymore.”

What if the police proceed, undeterred by the whistles? Then the dozens of heavily armed and armored men will not find themselves confronted by one lone woman with an infant, demanding to see the warrant with a furiously waving fist as she is dragged off for custodial torture.

“On each raid, the police will then have to fight off members from all households of the community, organized and ready to defend each other and fight back against police brutality,” he said, confident that such readiness is already in groundswell among the masses. “The task now is of organization,” he said.

‘A basis to build democracy after the King is overthrown’

Along with Security Councils, the CPS is also at work in communities to organize Welfare Councils, Dlamini explained. The monarchy, he argues, has virtually abandoned the people to fend for themselves in a country where up to 70% of the population eke a living on less than a dollar a day.

With the bulk of the economy owned by the King and run to sustain his indulgences – palaces, private jets, a fleet of Rolls Royce cars, million-dollar parties etc – his government is unable even to pay the wages of its public servants. Little can be expected from the government by the people living in the countryside.

“The only way forward is for the communities to organize themselves for their needs of education, housing, health, food and all the basic needs the government cannot fulfill,” he said. By undertaking these tasks of catering to their own security and welfare through grassroots organization, Dlamini argues, the communities in the countryside can decide how to govern themselves and totally defy the authority of the chiefs, who are the King’s local representatives.

“When we overthrow Mswati, these community-based councils will provide the basis to build a bottom-up democracy in Swaziland.”

 

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