Friday, 9 December 2022

Swaziland Newsletter No. 756 – 9 December 2022

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 756 – 9 December 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.

 

Poverty in eSwatini has bred unapologetic freedom fighters

By Ntombenhle Khathwane, Mail & Guardian (South Africa), 5 December 2022

SOURCE

 

At what point is a civil war declared? Anyone watching from the outside would be hard-pressed to believe that there is a civil war in small, peaceful eSwatini, especially as King Mswati III and his large entourage are gallivanting around the world, sweet talking investors to invest in his fiefdom

Yet, every day, even the main state-owned and controlled media report on the increasing incidents of politically motivated killings and bombings. There are reports that members of the Swaziland Royal Police and the army are under attack by pro-democracy activists, and that many police officers are attempting to resign, but their resignations are being denied by the king’s government. Unorganised Swazis are acting to remove the absolute monarch in the hopes that democracy will free them from poverty.

Organic change, uprisings and revolutions are ignited uniquely in each country. In 2010, when the Arab Spring saw a change of governments in Tunisia and Egypt, there was hope that the same spirit of democratic change would make its way across sub-Saharan Africa, but this did not happen. The time was not ripe. Is it now ripe in eSwatini, ruled by the last absolute monarch in Africa?

And while the Southern African Development Community (SADC), the African Union and most of the world have seemingly not paid much mind to the daily political bombings, violence and deaths in eSwatini, and have continued to give support to the absolute monarchy, the country is a good case study on how sustained poverty and oppression eventually breed generations who feel they have everything to gain by fighting for change. 

It can be argued that most of Africa is not governed by the will of the people, but the will of the people will eventually define itself; the people will find their voice and their power. 

Nobody could have predicted the ignition of what now seems clearly to be an unstoppable call for change in the Kingdom of eSwatini. The calls for democracy have been rumbling since the 1970s, and have gained momentum since the early 2000s as King Mswati III took over more of the economy, hoarding riches while sinking more of the population into unbearable poverty.

Since mid-2021, when mass protests calling for democracy broke out in the small country of 1.2 million people, Mswati has not had a night of peace. The protests of 2021 surprised all in eSwatini in the midst of Covid-related lockdowns and restrictions. They caught the royal regime, its government and political parties unawares. 

For years, those calling for democracy in and outside eSwatini have been hoping for such a response. For decades, the call for democracy was more robust outside the country; for the first time this has changed. It is clear that the protests will continue, even without outside assistance and support. When the time for an idea has come, it is unstoppable.

I remember speaking to my grandmother in the late 1990s. I would ask her why Swazis were not pushing for democracy, did they not want it?  I was in my late teens, naïve in my belief that true democracy is easy to attain.  At the time, I was hopeful that democracy would end poverty and inequality in South Africa; the euphoria of Thabo Mbeki’s “African Renaissance” truly had me in its thrall. 

My grandmother would say to me that democracy brings war and instability. This is a view that state-owned media — the only kind of media permitted in eSwatini — has drilled into the consciousness of the people, such that the majority has rejected democracy. Mswati and his propaganda machine did a good job of making people believe that the high rates of crime and violence in South Africa are the result of democracy.  Mswati and his regime did not foresee that generations born into abject poverty  would differ from the generations before; generations that bought into the narrative of elevating false peace over total freedom. 

From colonial times, Queen Gwamile and thereafter King Sobhuza II navigated the hostile political terrain, avoiding costly wars, and maintaining as peaceful a state as they could and preventing eSwatini from being usurped into apartheid South Africa. eSwatini fancied itself as the “Switzerland of Africa”, but there has always been a false peace here. 

King Mswati III knows that the only way to keep people subdued in the long term is to do so by using the military. He has used culture, religion and the economy as tools of oppression, and they have worked well on generations past, but clearly, no longer. 

He has used the military from time to time to quell protests, but he cannot use the military outright now, because to the rest of the world, he still pretends that eSwatini is a democracy. eSwatini is far from being a democracy. So there is a war raging in eSwatini, while the rest of the world pretends it is not so, and because Mswati continues to deny this fact. And yet even his state-controlled media has to report the daily violence.  

For the first time Mswati’s police and soldiers fear the people, because the people are bombing the homes and assets of any police and army person, regardless of whether that police officer or soldier has participated in stopping pro-democracy protests.

Over the past two decades, Mswati has been bold in his taking over the entire economy of eSwatini. It has one of the harshest tax regimes on its subjects, supposed to be its citizens. Mswati taxes Swazi businesses before they even break even, and yet he offers huge tax breaks to foreign companies, in which he is always a shareholder. 

The number of foreign-owned businesses has increased tenfold in the past two decades, but they do not benefit the people — they ill-treat and underpay workers, and are protected by the government.  It is a despicable situation, meant to keep Swazis out of economic activity, clearly with the thinking that economic suppression maintains Mswati’s greedy grip on power. And yet this has been the ignition for the change that is coming.

eSwatini has been classified as a middle-income country, yet the high levels of lived poverty experienced by the majority of the population contradict this. Most of the income goes into the coffers of the monarch, while public purse and public services receive none of that income, resulting in the current situation where public healthcare, social services and education are struggling. 

Hospitals have gone for years without adequate funding, even for basic medicines like paracetamol. Social and public services such as health and welfare rely heavily on donor funding, and Mswati pockets huge amounts he does not have to account for.  

Younger generations, whose psyche is shaped differently from older generations, who are not going to tolerate designed poverty, increasing inequality and lack of access to basic public goods and services, will become violent in their fight for freedom, equality and equal access.  

Perhaps this is what will move multinational organisations, including the SADC and the AU, to act more decisively in advancing democracy and prosperity for all, by at least denying membership to countries and regimes that are corrupt and undemocratic.  

Calls for the SADC and the AU to act against Mswati have come from all corners of the world, and have gone unheeded. Mswati has been aided in his corruption, oppression and absolutism.

The views expressed are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Mail & Guardian.

Ntombenhle Khathwane is an entrepreneur and social justice activist.

 

King Mswati tricks SADC again, promises to engage in a dialogue after Incwala

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 6 December, 2022

SOURCE

 

MBABANE: King Mswati has tricked the Southern African Development Community (SADC) again by promising to engage in a political dialogue after his Incwala ritual ceremony.

It is alleged that the King made this commitment to calm the situation so that he could perform rituals without any disturbances.

The King made the same commitment in November 2021 during a meeting with SADC and subsequently unleashed his soldiers and the police to shoot more civilians. He later told the police to meet  “eye for an eye” when dealing with what he described as insurgents seeking to disturb peace.

Speaking during the SADC Ministerial Committee Summit held in Windhoek last week, the Chairperson of the Southern African Development Community (SADC)MCO, Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah, said the people of Eswatini and the Government had agreed on the importance of a dialogue. 

“The people of eSwatini and the government have agreed on the importance of a national dialogue. What remains now is to work out the modalities and the process of that on how the national dialogue would be conducted,” said the Chairperson of the SADC Ministerial Committee.

Foreign Affairs Minister Thulie Dladla was representing eSwatini Government during the meeting, she then made a commitment that the dialogue would be held.

Reached for comments, human rights lawyer Thulani Maseko, the Chairperson of the pro-democracy Multi-Stakeholder Forum said the King hasn’t made any commitments with the pro-democracy movement to participate in a dialogue.

“The same thing happened when President Ramaphosa was here, Ramaphosa used a strong saying  it has been “resolved” that a political dialogue would take place after Incwala last year. We appreciate SADC’s commitment and for its consistent call for a dialogue, but we accept that the dialogue might be held in February with a huge doubt, considering the fact that no one is corresponding with the pro-democracy movement on this issue,” said the MSF Chairperson.

 

Cultural barriers are preventing women in eSwatini from accessing HIV care

By Colleta Dewa, The Body, 5 December 2022

SOURCE

 

Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), a tiny country of just over a million people in Southern Africa, has one of the highest HIV prevalence rates in the world. As of 2021, UNAIDS reported that 27.9% of people aged 15-49 within the country are living with the virus.

According to the Global Fund―an international financing partnership that works to eliminate HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria―63% of the people living with HIV (PLWH) in the country are women, who continue to be disproportionately affected by the virus. For example, the fund reported that in 2020, women and girls accounted for 63% of all new HIV diagnoses.

The Normalization of Violating Women in Eswatini

While the epidemic is generalized, it is women who bear the brunt of infections and socioeconomic consequences. Individuals who live in rural areas or who have had less access to formal schooling are at highest risk.

“Things were hard at home,” Nosiziba Kunene told TheBody. “We could not afford to have a decent meal every day. My parents had no land to farm. One of our neighbors offered to sell us a piece of his land. Unfortunately, my father had no money to pay for it. They made an agreement to give me as a wife to the 52-year-old [landowner]. I was only 14 years old then. The arrangement was made without my consent.”

Kunene, who is now 26 years old, is one of many girls and women in the landlocked kingdom who are entrapped within the social confines of culture norms, which can directly and indirectly expose them to acquiring HIV or other sexually transmitted diseases (STIs). Most of these outdated practices promote child marriages, wife inheritance, and polygamy, which in turn reduces the possibility for safer sex.

Led by King Mswati III, the last absolute monarch in Africa, Eswatini also prides itself on cultural festivals and traditional ceremonies that are celebrated religiously.

From a distance, these events may look glamorous to some. Especially the renowned Umhlanga Reed Dance festival―which celebrates chastity as well as virginity―wherein the king, a polygamist with 15 wives and 36 children, is traditionally expected to pick a new fiancé from among the thousands of girls that grace the occasion.

“By the time my father forced me to marry our neighbor in exchange for land, I was already deflowered,” Kunene explained while discussing the festival. “I had attended the reed dance the previous year, and I was raped while in camp preparing to participate. The man who raped me was one of the security guys who were supposed to be taking care of us.

“Being forced to marry the 52-year-old man only added salt to a wound that had not and will never heal [the rape],” she continued. “I dropped out of school to be his fourth wife. My dreams of becoming a lawyer were shuttered. Seven years into the marriage, I already had three children. That’s when I made up my mind and ran away. By that time, I was already diagnosed with HIV and my husband was denying me consistent access to medical attention.”

Eswatini Has a Deeply Male-Dominated Society, and Violence Against Women Is Widespread

In Swazi culture, decision-making has traditionally been a male prerogative. Women suffer discrimination, are treated as inferior, and are denied rights. Because family-planning decisions are made by men, women are subjected to continuous childbirth by their husbands and in-laws, against their will.

According to a report published by UNICEF in 2009, one in three girls in Eswatini have experienced sexual violence before the age of 18. About 14% of girls experienced rape or coerced sex (for example, through intimidation or threats) before age 18. One in six girls ages 13 to 17 had experienced sexual violence in the past year. TheBody was unable to locate any substantial follow-ups on this study since it was first conducted.

“It is a mess,” Nonhlanhla Dlamini explained to TheBody. “Older emaSwati males purposefully deflower little girls, which results in teenage pregnancies and exposes young girls to the risks of contracting sexually transmitted infections and the HIV virus. When the girls fall pregnant, they are forced into early marriages, dumped, their dreams are shattered and futures destroyed as they drop out of school.”

Dlamini is an activist and the director of the Swaziland Action Group Against Abuse (SWAGAA), a women-led, women’s rights organization that coordinates violence-prevention activities, provides comprehensive care and support services, and advocates for legal and policy reform. It also works to influence social norms and facilitate survivors’ access to justice by fostering safe environments and developing agency among women and girls.

According to Dlamini, objectifying young women and subjecting them to the tribal fetishes of old men does not conform to the sacred and common principles of dignity and human rights that society should promote and protect.

To read more of this article, click here

https://www.thebody.com/article/cultural-barriers-women-eswatini-hiv-care

 

Stop the violence, find peaceful resolution – women indaba

By Andile Dlamini, eSwatini Observer, 8 December 2022

SOURCE

 

The African Women's Peace and Development Foundation (AWPDF) has expressed concerns that if the political situation remained unaddressed, the country would see a resurgence of the violence and further deterioration of living standards.

The AWPDF held a two-day women’s peace building indaba in collaboration with  CANGO. The peace-building indaba was the first of a series of consultative forums that will be held with women at different levels and from different constituencies.

It is the beginning of a process, which is anticipated to generate strategic key points for more focused and sustainable women's participation in peace-building, development and governance.

The indaba unanimously agreed that there could be no development without peace, and no peace without development, hence the urgency of stopping the violence and finding a peaceful resolution to the current conflict. 

The organisation’s chairperson, Tizie Maphalala, said there was identification of a diversity of local, national, regional and international stakeholders who were relevant and should be engaged for this process.  

According to Maphalala, the indaba provided a unique opportunity for women in Eswatini to reflect on and engage each other’s perspectives on the current socio-economic and political situation, current initiatives they were implementing and the role they could play in ending the violence and building sustainable peace.

“Over the course of the two days, women shared experiences of the challenges they face in their daily realities and how these have been exacerbated by both COVID-l9 and the unprecedented violence witnessed in June, 2021 and its aftermath,” Maphalala stated.

She said they expressed their common pain as grandmothers, mothers, wives/ partners, sisters, aunts and nieces at the bloodshed witnessed since June last year, at having to bury family members and at the continuing trauma of the maimed and their families.

She stated that participants emphasised on the importance of women's inclusion in all aspects of development.

Maphalala further said the women agreed on the need to be proactive and strengthen local level engagement, to promote women working together, and to support one another at community level to overcome the challenges they face.

“In this regard, the indaba was also an opportunity for women to network and gain knowledge about each other’s sectors and mandates. During the indaba, a number of potential development projects on which women can partner across sectors were identified,” she said.

 

 

Intensified efforts to maintain a polio free Eswatini

World Health Organization, 7 December 2022

SOURCE

 

Eswatini has joined countries like Botswana, Mozambique, and Malawi in intensifying efforts to protect more people from polio. Following the finalisation of the National Polio Preparedness and Response Plan, the country went on to conduct a Polio Outbreak Simulation Exercise (POSE). This was through a two-day Tabletop Exercise (TTX) conducted from 29 to 30 November 2022 after several weeks of intense planning.

The purpose of the POSE was to test Eswatini’s operational readiness to respond to a polio outbreak. The activity also acted as a refresher on what to expect in the event of a polio outbreak, and what must be done to enable a coordinated and efficient response by the country team. A team of experts from WHO/AFRO consisting of Dr Diakite Epse Manouan  Dr Samuel Bawa, Dr Landoh Essoya, Dr Emmanuel Kayiira and Dr John Ogange facilitated the activity which was well attended by national stakeholders in line with the one health, the whole of government and society approach.

The POSE was commissioned by the honourable Minister of Health, Senator Lizzie Nkosi who emphasised the need to strengthen Emergency Preparedness and Response (EPR) as revealed during the COVID-19 response.   “The need for resilient health systems with the capacity to prevent, detect, respond to health threats and maintain continuity of essential health services can never be over-emphasised,” she said.

The Acting WHO Representative in the Kingdom, Dr Geoffrey Bisoborwa sent gratitude on behalf of the organisation to His Excellency Prime Minister Mr Cleopas Dlamini and the entire Government for the particular interest given to the Polio Eradication Initiative. This includes having robust Polio outbreak preparedness and response plan and organizing a Polio Outbreak Simulation exercise. “We have all it takes to keep polio off our Kingdom, and in an unfortunate event of happening, to detect and contain it swiftly,” Dr Bisoborwa said.

The country scored 56.7% as an overall performance. Some of the gaps noted included procedures for submitting outbreak notification to WHO in line with IHR, unclear role definitions in the plans, as well as surveillance SOPs. Nonetheless, there were positives, in that a structure is in place to respond to emergencies under National Disaster Management Agency (NDMA). The team also found that the structure of the Risk Communication and Community Engagement (RCCE) was adequate and strategies to communicate demonstrated.

The Kingdom of Eswatini last recorded a polio case in 1989 and has successfully maintained a polio-free status ever since leading to it being declared polio-free in 2005. The African region was subsequently declared polio-free in 2020. However, with the re-emergence of the circulation of the Wild polio Virus in Africa, the risk of reintroduction of the virus remains very high. Eswatini remains at risk of importing the wild poliovirus.

Since the inception of the Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) programme in 1980, the country has maintained an active surveillance system for the detection of poliomyelitis where all suspected cases of Acute Flaccid Paralysis (AFP) are reported and investigated immediately and tested for the poliovirus. As soon as a case of WPV is isolated, an immediate investigation is done commencing within 72 hours to identify the scope of the response activities based on such factors as the known extent of transmission AFP surveillance quality, major transit routes, international borders and origin of the WPV case. However, the country still needs to establish environmental surveillance to ensure that the detection of cases is improved.

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