Friday, 22 September 2023

Swaziland Newsletter No. 795 – 22 September 2023

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 795 – 22 September 2023

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.

 

We’ve lost hope – nurses

By Sifiso Nhlabatsi and Siboniso Nkambule, eSwatini Observer, 16 September 2023

SOURCE 

The on-going problem with drug shortages is rising to the level of ‘disaster’ as nurses have said they have lost hope that the situation would be solved anytime soon.

The healthcare workers said the drug shortages continue to take an enormous toll on them as they must deal with the problem on a daily basis, and also on patients who are on the receiving end of the shortages.

They said some of the medication in short supply or lacking, were Endotracheal tubes which serve to provide oxygen and inhaled gases to the lungs and protects the lungs from contamination, such as gastric contents or blood. These are used in the theatre.

Beside the Endotracheal tubes, the healthcare workers said there was a serious shortage of diagnostic agents and vaccines for below five years.

It was also revealed that the theatre were among the most affected departments as they were working on tight schedules.

The healthcare workers further revealed that some patients were told to go and buy what is required before an operation.

The situation, according to the healthcare workers, got worse each day, accusing government of making unfulfiled promises.

This comes as some patients were yesterday turned back at the Mbabane Government Hospital and Raleigh Fitkin Memorial Hospital  in Manzini as a result of the drug shortages and other medical equipment. 

Further compounding the situation for the patients is that their last place of hope, The Luke Commission, has revealed that it was faced with financial challenges, which may result in the facility closing its doors to patients.    

With the high costs of medication at pharmacies and also private hospitals, patients end up at The Luke Commission where they are treated free of charge by trained specialists and also get free medication.

However, The Luke Commission due to the financial challenges may close its doors to patients as the numbers continue to increase. Last year, the facility attended to 217 363 outpatient visits and for this year, projections are 274 578 outpatients’ visits and for next year, it is projected that the visits will shoot up to 337 420.

To read more of this report, click here

http://new.observer.org.sz/details.php?id=21125

 

Double celebration or double tragedy? Swaziland spends big on 55/55 celebration

By Dr Jabulane Matsebula (PUDEMO representative in Australia), Swati Newsweek, 17 September, 2023

SOURCE 

On April 2023, I wrote an essay in response to the government's decision to spend large sums of public money on celebrating King Mswati’s 55th birthday and 55 years of Swaziland's independence. I called this decision insensitive and the celebration senseless for various reasons.

Firstly, the country has a large external and public debt. It also has a high and persistent unemployment rate. Instead of borrowing more money for meaningless celebrations, the government priority should be on the things that matter, the healthcare sector, poverty reduction, economic growth and job creation. Spending more public monies on lavish celebrations can only increase the size of the current public debt. Swaziland’s external debt is also exploding. It is forecast to continuously increase between 2023 and 2028.

An International Monetary Fund (IMF) report in 2023 shows that “public debt rose to an estimated 42.3 percent of GDP by end FY22/23.” This level of debt is colossal and unacceptable. Swaziland is in deep debt, but the country continues to spend like a drunken sailor on activities with little or no economic value. The IMF report also shows that the country is struggling to pay back loans. For example, “the ratio of non-performing loans to total loans increased to 6.5 percent at end-June 2022, from 5.6 percent a year earlier.”

Secondly, the open display of opulence during the “double celebration” is grotesque and insensitive to the large section of the population living in poverty. According to a World Food Programme report in 2022, "69 per cent of the rural population live below the national poverty line and 25 percent are extremely poor".

When King Mswati hosted a lavish banquet on 5 September 2023 for his family and cronies, tens of thousands of families in rural areas went to bed hungry.

Thirdly, many people would also find these lavish celebrations irresponsible and insensitive to the sick who have limited or no access medical care. This government has presided over the total collapse of the healthcare system. In the past few weeks, there has been widespread media reports of acute shortages of medicines in hospitals.

One of the largest hospitals in the country was declared technically insolvent because it is not adequately funded. The images of lavish cerebration banquets are sickening and lack sense of moral responsibility. While the king and his cronies were dinning on lobsters and expensive wine, 69 per cent of the rural population was struggling to put a meal on the table.

Fourthly, I see no reasons for celebrations. What is there to celebrate? Mswati and the so-called independence celebration are a double whammy for the country. It is a double tragedy that we are celebrating the birth of a tyranny and an independence that never was. Swaziland was granted independence by the British colonial empire on 6 September 1968. King Mswati was born in April that year to steal from the poor and rule the country with an iron fist.

He is a curse to the Swazi nation. Swaziland independence lasted for four years and seven months before it was taken away by King Mswati’s father on 12 April 1973.

For many Swazis, the struggle for freedom continues. It is not yet Uhuru!

 

Plot to kidnap 3 persons with albinism amid elections

By Sibusiso Shange, Times of eSwatini, 15 September 2023

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Beliefs around the harvesting of body parts of people with albinism for good luck is still rife.

This is because the organisation of persons with albinism recorded three cases of attempted kidnappings since the beginning of the ongoing general elections in the country. This was disclosed by the President of the Persons with Albinism organisation in the country, Philemon Gama, in an interview yesterday.

Eswatini has been one of the African countries where a belief that human body parts, in particular those of persons with albinism, could help people win elections, has been a concern. The concern has resulted in authorities and other sectors of society in the African continent joining hands in warning people against the unfounded belief. However, apart from navigating the threats that come with such a belief, it was found that albinism does not affect an individual’s social development.  

It is a health condition that does not get worse or aggravated over time and does not exhibit any changes to life expectancy. In the case of the organisation, which falls under the Deputy Prime Minister’s Office in the country, Gama said they had since recommended to social workers that their affected members be relocated to places of safety.

By places of safety, Gama said he meant that their members be relocated to other relatives, where they would be out of danger. “As you know that our organisation falls under the Deputy Prime Minister’s Office, we recommended to the social workers that families of the affected members be engaged so that our members could be relocated to other relatives,” he said.

Gama stated that even though the organisation did not have tangible evidence linking the kidnappings to the ongoing elections, they could not turn a blind eye to the fact that some people still had the notion that body parts of people with albinism could help them win the elections. He said the belief was not only in Eswatini, but in other African countries, which were also in the elections process.

Gama stated that the organisation was of the idea that their affected members would remain in hiding until the end of the ongoing general elections. This, Gama said, was likely to deprive their members their constitutional right to participate in the formation of the new government.

Worth noting is that when dissolving the 11th Parliament, His Majesty King Mswati III came out clear and warned the nation against the belief that human body parts could help anyone win elections. The King warned that there should be no strange disappearances of people during the course of the general elections.

To read more of this report, click here

http://www.times.co.sz/news/141871-plot-to-kidnap-3-persons-with-albinism-amid-elections.html

 

‘We’re being abused even by male police officers’

By Nkosingiphile Myeni, eSwatini Observer, 19 September 2023

SOURCE 

Some male members of the Royal Eswatini Police Service (REPS) are being accused by sex-workers of abusing them while they go about their illegal business in the country’s streets.

This transpired at the National Sex-workers indaba held this week where four sex workers extracted the files on the police for human rights abuses.

However, the police, who were said to have been invited, were not present during the meeting.

During the event, which was organised by the Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) known as Voice Of Our Voices (VOOV), it was stated that there are 12 000 known sex workers in the country.

Part of the event also focused on the dissemination of Integrated Bio-behavioural Surveillance Survey (IBBSS), which states that globally, the Key Populations (KPs) which are subpopulations within the general population, including sex workers are at higher risk of HIV exposure because they engage in highly stigmatised behaviours and often are marginalised in their communities.

The sex-workers are also said to be called sex-workers because they admitted to be making an income from ‘selling sex.’

Sharing their testimonials where information on HIV/AIDS programmes for Key Populations, including female sex workers, three of the four sex workers shared gritty encounters with the police.

Stakeholders studying sex-workers said rape among sex-workers was still happening unabated.

Bee Dlamini (not her real name) from Manzini said she was assaulted all over the body by the police.

“I was bed-ridden for days and failed to go out to hustle for my children,” she said to the attentive audience of over 200 people in attendance.

She said she tried to report the matter against the police officers, whom she did not disclose, but her efforts were watered down by the officers she found at the police station, who called her with offensive words.

She said officers at the police station said she reeked and ordered her to get out of their sight.
She said she was part of the sex-workers plying their trade at the city centres, however, each time they would see the police, they evade them.

She said the patrolling police would chase after them, extract them from their hiding places and assault them.

After the question and answer session as soon as the panel had shared their experiences, one of the sex-workers claimed a police officer picked her from the road and diverted her to a forest, where he drew a gun.

She said the officer placed the firearm on his thigh and ordered her to perform acts which cannot be repeated for ethical reasons.

To read more of this report, click here

http://new.observer.org.sz/details.php?id=21139

 

SNAT Secretary General Lot Vilakati: Numbers at Extraordinary General Meeting, a clear indication that members are ready to defend their President

By Colani Khulekani Maseko, Swaziland News, 16 September, 2023

SOURCE 

MANZINI: Lot Vilakati, the Secretary General (SG) of the Swaziland National Association of Teachers (SNAT) says, the hundreds of teachers who attended the Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) is a clear indication that, they are ready to defend their President Mbongwa Dlamini and the union.

Speaking to this Swaziland News on Saturday morning, Vilakati further said,as the National Executive Committee (NEC) they will continue to stand with their dismissed President.

Mbongwa Dlamini, the SNAT President, was dismissed by the Teaching Service Commission (TSC) for alleged absenteeism, he was persecuted for representing teachers.

“The hundreds of teachers who attended the Extraordinary General Meeting is a clear indication that they are ready to defend their President and Union. As the leadership as well, we will continue to stand by our President all the way. We also applaud the media for always covering our struggles as teachers,” said the SNAT Secretary General. 

Hundreds of teachers convened at the SNAT Centre in Manzini on Friday to deliberate on a way forward regarding the dismissal of their President Mbongwa Ernest Dlamini, among other issues.

 

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