Friday, 14 October 2022

Swaziland Newsletter No. 748 –14 October 2022

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 748 –14 October 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.

 

The King vs. The People: The Struggle to Bring Democracy to eSwatini

By Sazi Bongwe, Harvard Political Review, October 9, 2022

SOURCE

 

As we know too well, history is no stranger to the idea that a single match can light a roaring fire. 

The people of eSwatini — officially known as the Kingdom of eSwatini and formerly known as Swaziland, one of the world’s 12 remaining absolute monarchies — have reminded the world of just that. In June 2021, Siphiwe Mkhabela had to find the body of her son Thabani Nkomonye, a 25-year-old law student at the University of eSwatini, with its eyes gouged out and with three holes in it on a field in Nhlambeni, eSwatini. A death that was all but confirmed to be at the hands of the police gave rise to the unrelenting voice of the people of eSwatini. 

Protests demanding justice bled into pro-democracy protests, which in turn bled into June 29, 2021, what is now remembered as the eSwatini massacre — a massacre of 80 protestors by the army and police forces. In spite of it all, King Mswati III’s grasp remains firmly and remorselessly on the throne, and democracy continues to elude the people of eSwatini. 

The King and the People

“If you open the country’s constitution, it says the country is called Swaziland,” explained Manqoba Nxumalo, a human rights activist from Manzini, eSwatini and a founder of the eSwatini Solidarity Fund, in an interview with the HPR. “The king woke up on his birthday, without notice, without informing parliament, without debate, and just decided to change the name of the country [to eSwatini] which grammatically doesn’t even make sense. If there’s any symbol of absolute monarchy, it’s that.”

What explains King Mswati’s continued position as the last absolute monarch in Africa? “The number one thing is mythmaking,” according to Cebelihle Mbuyisa, an eSwatini-born writer and subeditor, also in conversation with the HPR. “For many years, the royal family has positioned itself and told stories about itself like some kind of saviors of the Swazi nation and preservers of our culture.” 

In the words of Nxumalo, “In a continent where every other country [has had] some form of political conflict and civil strife, Swaziland has not had that…It has been idyllic and beautiful and peaceful, according to people outside the country, and seen as the last bastion of peace in a continent ravaged by conflict.” He continued, “the monarchy has postured itself as a pristine traditional stroke, a cultural heaven for the world to see how Africa was before colonialism.” For the most part, this benevolent picture has allowed eSwatini’s atrocities to occur beneath the radar of most human rights organizations. 

Such is the myth of the Swazi royal family, as absurd as it is entrenched. King Mswati’s father, King Sobhuza II, observed the longest verifiable reign of any monarchy in recorded history, ruling for 82 years from 1899 to his death in 1982, with Mswati ruling since. Yet it is important that one looks beyond the spectacle of the monarchy and toward the devastating consequences of its authoritarianism. 

Senseless name-changing is hardly the only sign of the king’s power over the people. “All I knew growing up, all I saw, was poverty: Young people, men and women, having to go through life without means, having to accept poverty as the default position through which to live their lives,” says Mbuyisa of his upbringing. It is this that led him to journalism: “In Swaziland, eventually you don’t expect anyone to take accountability. But things still must be noted. And that is why I decided to do journalism. Because of the suffering around me, I felt that it’s something that ought to be noted.”

To say that poverty in contemporary eSwatini is pervasive would be an understatement. “I mean, you can find economic hardships everywhere in Africa,” says Nxumalo, “they are very acute in this country.” Whichever indicator one chooses to use — unemployment, poverty, hunger, or inequality — points to a suffering people. 

Yet as is often the case for countries of Africa and the Global South, it is a suffering that goes unnoticed. “It’s just unfortunate that it is only when people die, when there’s violence and brutality, that certain matters get attention,” remarked Qhawekazi Khumalo, Deputy Secretary in the external region of the People’s United Democratic Movement and a member of Swazi Lives Matter, a global solidarity movement, in an interview with the HPR. “Nobody is sending anything to Swaziland; I’ve never heard anybody sending anything to Swaziland like they do in Ukraine. The value attached to the lives of emaSwati (the Swazi people) is neither here nor there for the international community.” 

Raising the Voice of the People

Each of the above economic conditions alone would be enough to push any society to the brink. Yet while the struggle in eSwatini has been gathering momentum for a while, it is only recently that it has reached its fullest expression. Part of the reason for this, according to Mbuyisa, was that “because of the mythmaking, people cannot imagine a life or a governance of the country outside of the royal family.” Khumalo added that since “most of us are born into oppression, it’s taken quite a lot for us to realize that, you know, it doesn’t have to be like this.”

There is also a brutally entrenched climate of repression, where neither political parties nor independent media are allowed to form. For Nxumalo, the reasons his people rose up and why he founded the eSwatini Solidarity Fund, a volunteer organization whose goal is to help activists and ordinary Swazis who are victims of state brutality and repression, are the same. “All of those things, a political and economic environment created by this absolute monarchy, account for why most Swazis stood up to fight but also why the Solidarity Fund had to come up,” he said. ‘It needed to respond to the massacre, not just a massacre that happened overnight, but rather a massacre that had been happening and maturing differently with the evolving of time.” 

And so in a fashion and on a scale that the country had never seen before, the people of eSwatini registered their discontent, to deathly ends. “The younger generation just said this is it, we’ve had enough. We are tired of living in an underdeveloped country, where one man continues to live in luxury, where you see how this man is able to amass such a lot of wealth from the country’s resources and yet he has nothing to show for in terms of development, and a dignified life for the people,” said Khumalo.

Most, if not all, citizens, when asked what they are primarily calling for out on the roads, will give one answer: multiparty democracy. “In Africa, liberal democracy has been embraced almost everywhere,” Nxumalo notes, “even where there are war torn places they have embraced at least the basic tenets of multiparty democratic governance. How Africans have allowed Swaziland in the 21st century to have political parties banned is itself shocking.” 

That PUDEMO, of which Qhawekazi Khumalo is a member, has managed not only to organize but to gain traction and membership is itself a significant and valiant response to the authoritarian power of the monarchy. “We want a multiparty democracy,” explains Khumalo, “and that is not for any co-option in any structure of the current government. It is an uprooting of those particular structures, because our oppression comes from those structures.” 

As has been the case with all other liberation movements across Africa and the Global South, the tale of the people of eSwatini is one of oppression and resistance. The impunity and remorselessness of King Mswati’s regime is there for all to see, yet even behind that is another hidden layer of insidious suppression. As a journalist, Mbuyisa has borne witness to much of this. Speaking of PUDEMO he says, “there is nothing they haven’t suffered.”

The most brutal instrument of the state is the police, who, in Mbuyisa’ words, have a particular modus operandi: “They will go to any roadblock, to any protest, to any march, and fire guns; fire at random, a few gunshots to the air, and then aim the gun, just kill one person and then leave.” He further explained that they have already done this before. “That’s what they did in many, many sites around the country. July 4, 2021, they shot a guy in Ngwenya, and I happened to be there.” 

Mbuyisa’s experiences are not solely as a witness. At the height of eSwatini’s unrest last year, he and another journalist, Magnificent Mndebele, working at New Framewere dispatched to report on the protests. They sensed that they were being surveilled, and had it confirmed when they were followed and threatened to delete whatever they had gathered. Mbuyisa and Mndebele were later stopped on the highway and taken to a nearby police station, where they were detained, interrogated, assaulted, and tortured.

“You come close to dying and you see that, oh, these people can really kill you,” Mbuyisa said.

To read more of this report click here

 

Mswati III and scholars at daggers drawn

By Sambulo Dlamini, CAJ News, 6 October 6, 2022

SOURCE

 

MBABANE: University authorities can blame unforeseen circumstances for the postponement of the annual graduation ceremony at the University of Eswatini (UNESWA).

Yet they ought to have seen this coming.

King Mswati III and students have not been seeing eye to eye since the beginning of the worst political unrest in the Southern African country last year.

Only that it has now assumed a literal dimension.

The graduation ceremony was scheduled for this weekend but has been halted as the unrest in the Kingdom escalates.

“Due to unforeseen circumstances, the graduation ceremony has been postponed from Saturday, 8th October, 2022 to a future date to be announced,” reads the memorandum by Dr Salebona Simelane, UNESWA Registrar.

That “future date” apparently is not anywhere on the horizon.

Mswati III is the Chancellor of this volatile varsity that for months has resembled a warzone than an institution of higher learning.

By postponing the graduation ceremony, authorities have therefore curbed a potentially explosive situation. The king was not welcome.

This comes at a time students have been protesting over insufficient scholarships.

Ahead of the ceremony, the graduation arena was vandalised. While students were obviously chief suspects of the destruction this week, some reports suggest unknown outsiders breached the security and turned the facility upside down. It is said this mysterious group was armed with sticks and stones. Police sources confirmed the arrest of four men.

In some areas, there is graffiti on some walls denouncing the monarch. “Mswati Must Fall” is the most prominent one at this university of more than 7 600 students enrolled. Thus, the writing is on the wall!

“We cannot have someone presiding over a government that is murdering students capping us,” said a student at the main Kwaluseni campus centre-west of the country.

The campus in the Manzini, the largest city in Eswatini, has been restless ever since the onset of the protests in May last year. In fact, protests ongoing in Eswatini started after police allegedly murdered law student, Thabane Nkomonye, who was a student at this university. The body of the 25-year-old, who was not an activist, was found outside Manzini.

Police claimed he died in an accident but students are convinced he was yet another victim of brutality by the maligned Royal Eswatini Police Service, blamed for the repression that has reinforced Mswati II’s repressive regime. An unspecified number of students have been killed, abducted and tortured during a standoff with law enforcement.

Universities and schools have at times been forced to close because of the protests. Even education at some high schools around the country has sometimes come to a standstill as scholars protest in solidarity with the tertiary counterparts.

The protests have morphed into the worst civil unrest in Eswatini, where the broader society has also made the most of the situation to protest repression and demand democratic reforms. In Eswatini, Africa’s last absolute monarchy, political parties are banned, dating back to the 1970s when King Sobhuza II, now late. Mswati III has ruled since 1986, aged 18. Some opposition activists have been jailed.

Late last month, it emerged legislators Bacede Mabuza and Mthandeni Dube were tortured in custody. “We encourage all emaSwati in all sectors to rise and disown this senseless regime and demand the release of the MPs immediately,” Thantaza Silolo, spokesperson of the Swaziland Liberation Movement (SWALIMO), stated.

A number of police officers have been killed in what is believed to be reprisal attacks. State institutions have been bombed. Arsonists have petrol-bombed even primary schools. “Government condemns in the strongest possible terms the ongoing senseless attacks on members of the country’s security forces,” said Alpheous Nxumalo, government spokesperson recently. Nxumalo said the insecurity was derailing national dialogue.

Some critics allege government practices double standards. “Why does government issue a statement when the security forces are shot but is silent when forces kill unarmed citizens?” queried Linda Dlamini.

For now, nothing has come out of the domestic dialogue. Rather, the gulf between the Mswati III regime and pro-democracy activists has widened. The Southern African Development Community (SADC) regional bloc has also been dithering on the Eswatini crisis. Twice this year, summits specifically scheduled to discuss Eswatini were cancelled because Mswati III was “not available.”

SADC’s last summit, held in the Democratic Republic of Congo in August, was a routine conference of heads of state and government. Mswati III attended. The 16-member SADC pledged to convene an “Extra-ordinary Summit of the Organ Troika plus Eswatini.” A date is still to be determined.

 

Monarch no-go area for MPs - EBC

By Joseph Zulu, Times of eSwatini, 11 October 2022

SOURCE

 

PIGG’S PEAK: The Monarch is a ‘no-go area’ for parliamentarians as their powers are limited to government matters.

This was said by Prince Mhlabuhlangene, the Chairperson of the Elections and Boundaries Commission (EBC). He was speaking during a meeting with traditional authorities yesterday at the Pigg’s Peak Hotel and Casino. Prince Mhlabuhlangene’s presentation received a thumbs-up from the traditional authorities, who now want this to be taken to the rest of the country. The prince made a presentation on elections, in readiness for the 2023 general elections. He said parliamentarians were elected to represent the people but that their powers were not absolute. He said their authority was limited to the government section of the country and this excluded the Monarch.

The prince said it should be noted that government was separate from the Monarch and that the Members of Parliament’s (MPs) authority ended at government level, as such, they could not cross over to the side of the Monarch. He said the MPs could say whatever they wanted about government but not the Monarch. “That’s a no-go area for them,” he said, adding that their immunity was limited. The prince stated that though MPs had parliamentary privilege, this did not mean they could say whatever they wanted to anyone. “You cannot get that immunity if you are now canvassing things that are out of your authority,” he said, giving examples of statements such as ‘King must fall’.  Also, he warned that saying the Monarch must fall was treasonable as it meant that the person was fighting with the status quo. He said Eswatini was a Monarchical Sovereignty, meaning that the Monarch was protected by the law.

Prince Mhlabuhlangene said it was wrong for parliamentarians to use their forum to criticise the Monarch. “You can say whatever you want about the government, but not about the Monarch,” he warned. Prince Kekela, Chief of Mvuma, commended EBC chairman for the presentation. He said it was very informative and hoped that it could be compiled and handed over to the traditional authorities, so that they could be able to deliver the message to the communities. Chief Kekela also wondered why parliamentarians who were supposed to work for the government interfered in matters of royalty. “Bangenelwa yini, ngumoya webusathane yini?” he asked. He said the section of government and that of the Monarch were different. Prince Kekela expressed hope that they could also be taught about this so that they understood their limitations. He warned that while parliamentarians were elected, kingship was acquired by birth. “These are two different things,” he stated. Also among the attendees were Prince Mphatfwa, who is the Chief of Ludlawini and Chief Jubiphathi of Nyakatfo.

 

King Mswati to go to seclusion again without a political dialogue.

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 9 October 2022

SOURCE

 

MBABANE: King Mswati is highly expected to go to his Incwala seclusion again in the next few weeks without hosting the highly anticipated political dialogue.

Eswatini, a tiny Kingdom situated in Southern Africa is in the midst of a political crisis after Mswati allegedly unleashed his police and soldiers to shoot and kill dozens of civilians merely for demanding democratic reforms.

Reached for comments, King Mswati’s Spokesperson Percy Simelane said the Southern African Development Community (SADC) tasked its Troika Organ to work on the eSwatini turmoil in accordance with the Constitution, in an all-inclusive manner adding that no date had been set.

“SADC tasked its Troika to work on the Eswatini turmoil in accordance with the 2005 Constitution in an all-inclusive manner. We are not aware of any date set by Troika but very much alive to Eswatini's concerns about the hostile environment that currently obtains which includes threats by key stakeholders to use violent means to deal with those who will present against them or stand in their way during the dialogue. How Troika sees these concerns has not yet been made public,” said the King’s Spokesperson when responding to our questionnaire on Sunday evening.

Speaking to this Swaziland News on Sunday evening, human rights lawyer Thulani Maseko, the Chairperson of the MultiStakeholder Forum (MSF)said it was very unfortunate that the King’s Spokesperson could claim there were people who wanted to disrupt a political dialogue. 

Responding to our questions on the subject matter, the MSF Chairperson said it was, in fact, the masses who have been calling for a dialogue even before SADC was seized with the eSwatini political crisis.

The MSF is a coalition of pro-democracy groups collectively advocating for democratic reforms in the Kingdom eSwatini.

“SADC Troika produced a draft with the terms of reference and Government has not reacted to the proposal by Troika that stipulates what form must the dialogue take. So he can’t then say it is the Troika that must fix dates when they have not reacted to the proposal by Troika that stipulates how the dialogue must be held. You will recall that back in February, SADC Troika proposed the dialogue with timelines because you can’t have a dialogue without fixed timelines. But Government undermined those timelines, so the main issue we are faced with here is that Government is reluctant to commit on the proposal by Troika,” said the MultiStakeholder Forum Chairperson.

Eswatini is ruled by King Mswati as an absolute Monarch with Executive,Judicial and Legislative powers, political parties are banned from participating in elections.

Two Members of Parliament (MPs) Bacede Mabuza and Mthandeni Dube were thrown behind bars allegedly by King Mswati for demanding democratic reforms, they are facing politically motivated terrorism charges.

 

We need more women in parliament: SWALIMO Chairperson Busi Mayisela

By Eugene Dube, Swati Newsweek, 8 October, 2022

SOURCE

 

MBABANE: Busi Mayisela, the Swaziland Liberation Movement (SWALIMO) Chairperson believes Swazi women are oppressed by the royal Swazi regime hence there is a need have more women in Parliament.

She was responding to questions from this publication about the challenges faced by women in Eswatini.

She said, “We need more women in strategic positions especially in Parliament. There are still laws that discriminate women, eg (when a woman is widowed, she cannot be in Parliament for 2 years. That’s ridiculous.”

She narrated, “Swalimo will always ensure the broader aspect of equality, there are various clevegea but the idea of women being fully represented in society and in the broader spectrum of leadership is paramount, so through the women’s league we are certain that this sector will and doing justice to women representation.”

During the interview, Mayisela blamed the state for allowing women oppression.

She said, “This is unfortunate as women are the Pillars of families. If you feed one woman, you are sure that she will feed at least 10 other family members. Our government is not helping in sorting this mess. Actually the government perpetrates this abuse by the textile industries.”

Mayisela said the economic situation of the textile workers should be improved.

“Government should revisit the minimum wage bill. It’s ridiculous and unfair to our people. The conditions are terrible as well. Some textile employees cannot even afford to take maternity leaves because they are not paid. No they are not,” said Mayisela.

 

Tension looming as Sergeant Dumsile Khumalo who led police officers in a historic protest faces arrest.

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 12 October, 2022

SOURCE

 

MBABANE: Sergeant Dumsile Khumalo, the Secretary General of the Police Staff Association is now facing arrest after leading disgruntled law enforcers into a historic protest march in demand for a salary increment.

As exclusively reported by this Swaziland News on Monday evening, police officers eventually marched to the Prime Minister’s office on Tuesday morning, they are demanding their money meant to increase their salaries under Phase Two (2).

It has been disclosed that members of Executive Command have looted over R100million in monies meant to increase salaries for junior police officers, the money was misappropriated through the creation of over twenty (20) Deputy National Commissioner and Assistant Commissioners posts that are now redundant.

It has been disclosed that after creating the posts and falsely convincing King Mswati that they were benchmarking with the Southern African Development Community (SADC) standards, the Executive Command subsequently allocated themselves huge salaries that depleted the millions meant to increase salaries for junior officers:

Reached for comments, Sergeant Dumsile Khumalo confirmed that a warrant of arrest was being prepared against her, however, she declined to comment further and referred this journalist to the Police Spokesperson, Superintendent Phindile Vilakati.

“I am aware of the warrant of arrest, please contact the Police Spokesperson,” said the influential police officer.

But junior police officers who spoke to this Swaziland News on Wednesday warned the Police Executive Command against touching their leader Seargent Dumsile Khumalo.

“Nothing will happen to Madam Dumsile, if they arrest her we will forcefully release her, wait and see. We are police officers and we want our money. This is not end, even if they can release this money under Phase Two (2), we want the other monies that disappeared under the Death Benefit Fund,” said a junior police officer.

Police Staff Association Secretary General Sergeant Dumsile Khumalo, a police officer based at Malkerns Police Station has been described by junior police officers as a human rights defender who has been advocating for the welfare of police officers since she joined the organization. 

“She is brave and powerful but she needs our support as police officers, we know the strategic places and individuals that we can target if they arrest her. We are working for this government and we know it’s operations,” said the police officer.

A questionnaire was sent to Superintendent Phindile Vilakati, however, she had not responded at the time of compiling this report.

Reached for comments, Sibusiso Nhlabatsi, a highly regarded human rights lawyer said the allegations suggesting that the police officer who led the protest might be arrested are misplaced adding that the law enforcers had a right to bargain collectively.

In terms of labour laws, collective bargaining refers to the negotiation of wages and other conditions of employment by an organized body of employees.

“Police officers have a right to collectively bargain for better terms and conditions of service. If the junior police officers are alleging that within their place of employment, there were different phases that were implemented and were not favorable to their working conditions, they have a right to confront the Minister responsible for police which is the Prime Minister. So there is no criminal offense when you say you are bargaining collectively for purposes of better terms and conditions of service. The Police Service Act established the Police Staff Association solely for such matters. So you cannot therefore say, when an employee raises grievances, it’s a criminal offense. If it can happen that a police officer gets arrested for collective bargaining, that would mean the country has reached a deep end,” said the human rights lawyer.

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