Swaziland Newsletter No. 797 – 6 October 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.
Commissioner
General issued order to assault Bacede Mabuza, over 100 recruits and drunkards
unleashed on badly injured MP, shout “You will know King Mswati today”
By
Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 1 October, 2023
MATSAPHA: Phindile Dlamini, the
Correctional Services Commissioner General allegedly issued an order to over
one hundred (100) recruits, to assault incarcerated pro-democracy Member of
Parliament (MP) Mduduzi Bacede Mabuza.
The Commissioner General went on to deny
the MP the right to eat for two (2) days, after blocking his family on Friday.
It has been disclosed that, family members
were only allowed to see the incarcerated MP earlier on Saturday after this Swaziland
News exposed that Mabuza was assaulted inside prison.
Information gathered by this publication
suggests that, the warders first provoked the MP by blocking his wife and a
relative from delivering his food, that was on Friday morning.
The warders allegedly lied to the family
member who was at the Matsapha Prison gate that, Mabuza said he doesn’t want to
see his wife anymore, yet the MP was patiently waiting for his food inside
prison.
The warders then told the MP to go back to
his prison cell as the waiting time for the food was over, the MP allegedly
responded by saying he won’t go back to the cell without his food.
Over one hundred (100) recruits including
drunkards, who drink alcohol at Matsapha Prison Bar were then unleashed by the
senior Correctional Officers to assault the MP.
It has been disclosed that, in the
process, the recruits and drunkards were allegedly shouting “You will know King
Mswati today, the country is facing political instability because of you.
Utawuyati iNkhosi Mswati namuhla, lelive linjena nje nguwe lowacala lentfo”.
A questionnaire was sent to Superintendent
Gugulethu Dlamini, the Correctional Services Spokesperson, however, he had not
responded at the time of compiling this report.
Reached for comments by this Swaziland
News on Saturday, lawyer Sicelo Mngomezulu, the lawyer representing the
incarcerated MPs confirmed the assault adding that, the family and lawyers were
then blocked from seeing the MP hence his condition after the assault, remain
unknown.
“It’s true, we can confirm that the MP was
assaulted and his family was then blocked from delivering food, lawyers are
also not allowed to see him. As a result, his condition remain unknown and we
are preparing to file an urgent application, seeking an order to be allowed to
see him,” said the lawyer.
MPs Bacede Mabuza and Mthandeni Dube were
arrested as per an order allegedly issued by King Mswati merely for demanding
democracy inside Parliament.
On another note, the incarcerated MP is
currently being kept inside the maximum prison with serious injuries, he was
also assaulted all over the body including in the private parts and the
eyes.
Political activists including human rights
defenders are killed by Mswati’s forces inside prison cells, the State normally
cover-up the human rights violations by pretending to be establishing a
“Commission of Inquiry” with predictable findings and recommendations.
See also
Grave Violation of
human rights recorded
https://developmentdiaries.com/eswatini-grave-violation-of-human-rights-recorded/
Authorities must investigate brutal
prison attack on former MP (Amnesty International)
Swaziland Elections Round-up
eSwatini announces parliamentary election results
under monarch’s rule
By Lunga Masuku, Reuters, 3 October 2023
A total of 51 men and eight
women were elected to Eswatini's parliament in last week's election, with a
strong showing for pro-royalist candidates in results expected to make little
difference to the politics of Africa's last absolute monarchy.
The Southern Africa nation has
been ruled by King Mswati III since 1986, when he inherited the crown from his
father Sobhuza II. It went to the polls on Friday to elect politicians who
effectively function as the king's advisers with no executive power. The
electoral commission published the results on Monday.
Political parties are banned
in the country of about 1.2-million people, but individual candidates are
allowed to run for seats in the House of Assembly every five years.
Of the parliamentarians
elected in Eswatini, which changed its name from Swaziland in 2018, most were
seen as being loyal to the king and included former journalists and teachers.
In addition to the 59 elected
MPs, the king will appoint 10 more to the House of Assembly at his discretion,
which will include five women.
An AU-led election observation
mission said women continued to be underrepresented in parliament.
Many Swazis are reluctant to
criticise the 55-year-old king despite rising anger that fuelled violent
pro-democracy protests in 2021.
Mswati has also been accused
by pro-democracy campaigners of consistently evading calls for meaningful
reforms that would push the country towards democracy.
King appoints 10 MPs
By Sibongile Sukati, eSwatini Observer, 5
October 2023
Four former Cabinet ministers
have been reappointed as Members of Parliament (MPs) by His Majesty King Mswati
III.
This was during the
announcement of the 10 MP appointees for the House of Assembly by the Attorney
General (AG), Sifiso Mashampu Khumalo at 6pm yesterday during a press
conference at his offices.
The former ministers are Prince
Simelane, who was minister of Housing and Urban Development, Princess Lindiwe
who was minister of Home Affairs, former minister of Foreign Affairs and
International Cooperation, Thulisile Dladla and former minister of Commerce,
Industry and Trade, Manqoba Khumalo.
The attorney general also
announced that Prince Lindani, Chief Mshengu, Chief Mvimbi Matse and Chief
Ngalokhulu Mabuza were also appointees.
Completing the list was former
Elections and Boundaries Commission commissioner Nkosingumenzi Dlamini and
Tsembeni Magongo.
This now brings to total 69 MPs after 59 members of
Parliament were elected last
week Friday during the national elections held nationwide.
This now brings the number of
women in the 12th House of Assembly to 12, as eight others were elected during
the secondary elections last week.
To read more
of this report click here
http://new.observer.org.sz/details.php?id=21239
Opposition calls for change after polls close
By
Africanews dot com, 30 September 2023
Voting ended on Friday in Eswatini's legislative elections, Africa's last
absolute monarchy.
After sunset, a handful of voters were
still lining up to cast their ballots at a polling station in the capital,
Mbabane, with not much hope the vote will bring much change.
“The attempt was actually to say let us
have people who are going to go into Parliament and be a voice of the
voiceless, understanding that in Swaziland there is still a dictatorship, where
in the King actually has all the power, absolute monarchy that is. So we want a
voice in Parliament to say, let us democratize,” explains Thantaza Silolo,
Swaziland Liberation Movement spokesperson.
Despite recent and deadly pro-democracy
protests, no turmoil was observed during these elections in which voters were
to choose 59 members of the lower house of parliament, which plays only an
advisory role to King Mswati.
Polling stations started to close at
around 7:00 pm local and counting began in the southern African nation, ruled
by King Mswati III for the last four decades.
“Let us have the economy shared amongst
ourselves, and let us have power, because they were saying let us have a Prime
Minister that has been elected by the people not just a Prime Minister who has
been appointed or appointed by the King. Because when the Prime Minister is
appointed by the King it means he will not account to the population, he will
only account to the one that appointed him, because he holds the power,”
adds Thantaza Silolo.
Formerly known as Swaziland, Eswatini was
shaken in 2021 by pro-democracy protests that were violently quashed by
security forces, with dozens of people killed.
The results, to be announced within a few
days, are seen as a foregone conclusion by the opposition, which largely called
for a boycott of the vote.
Political parties are banned in the
landlocked country between South Africa and Mozambique, and lawmakers cannot be
affiliated with political groups.
The constitution emphasises “individual
merit” as the basis for selecting MPs. While it allows for freedom of
association, opposition groupings are often run from abroad.
Most candidates are loyal to King Mswati.
Elections chaos as man draws gun, voter stabbed
By Sibusiso Zwane,
Stanley Khumalo, Joseph Zulu and Ntombi Mhlongo, eSwatini News, 30
September 2023
MANZINI: The secondary elections in the Manzini-Mbabane corridor were
marred by chaos, frustrations and fears of rigging.
Heightened suspicions of the involvement of textile workers, allegations
flew back and forth, that one irate voter who supported a certain candidate
contesting the Member of Parliament (MP) position drew a gun to scare alleged
riggers. At the height of the fracas, some alleged textile workers and the
aspiring MP ran for cover. As a result, police were called to three of the
polling stations as the aggrieved voters attacked voters they believed were
ineligible to vote under Manzini North.
They vowed to deal with candidates who bought votes from the textile
industry, mainly in Matsapha, where over 20 000 people are employed.
In one of the incidences, it is alleged that one of the followers of an equally
aggrieved MP candidate drew a gun to show potential cheaters that ‘enough is
enough.’
According to an eyewitness, the aggrieved voters camped at the polling
station before voting started at 7am. Seeing a very long queue with unfamiliar
faces, word went out that the textile workers had arrived and were forming part
of the registered voters under this embattled constituency.
The eyewitnesses said the angry voters regrouped, in one accord, went to the
polling station to confront those they suspected of having come solely to rig
the elections, in favour of those who bribed them for illegal
votes. During the confrontation, they said one of them allegedly drew a
gun, while demanding that the voters, whom they believed were textile workers
should not dare go to vote.
To read more of this report, click
here
http://www.times.co.sz/news/142036-elections-chaos-as-man-draws-gun-voter-stabbed.html
Other
reports on the Swaziland election
Eswatini
parliamentary elections: Critics say the vote is a sham election
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4meSod3Z5Y
Malema describes
Eswatini parliamentary elections as a 'derision of democracy'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DwKerVlXPc
Sive Siyinqaba:
70% of our members won elections
http://www.times.co.sz/news/142104-sive-siyinqaba-70-of-our-members-won-elections.html
New faces a
majority in 12th parliament
http://new.observer.org.sz/details.php?id=21222
Unpopular
candidates defeat 17 ex-MPs
http://www.times.co.sz/news/142049-unpopular-candidates-defeat-17-ex-mps.html
Some elections
losers blame bribery and corruption
http://www.times.co.sz/news/142085-some-elections-losers-blame-bribery-and-corruption.html
Eswatini’s
parliamentary elections get nod of approval from observer missions
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