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Friday, 14 November 2025

Swaziland Newsletter No. 903 – 14 November 2025

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 903 – 14 November 2025

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 newsletter and past editions are also available online on the Swazi Media Commentary blogsite.

 

US deportations like a kidnapping, says eSwatini lawyer

AFP, 7 November 2025

SOURCE 

Leading Eswatini human rights lawyer Sibusiso Nhlabatsi likens the shadowy US expulsions of 15 men to his country, a tiny kingdom in southern Africa, to kidnappings.

Since the first five deportees were flown from the United States on a military plane in July, authorities have blocked the lawyer from visiting them at the high-security prison where they are held.

Another 10 arrived in October and had also reached out, via their relatives, for assistance, the lawyer told AFP in an interview.

The expulsions are part of the Trump administration’s crackdown on migrants which has seen scores removed to countries in Africa and Central America.

“Eswatini finds itself participating in what I can call human trafficking or kidnapping because you cannot have these third-party state deportees being housed (here) while denying them access to lawyers,” Nhlabatsi said.

“They are far from their families, so their relatives cannot come here, yet they are being denied a basic right,” he said.

Authorities have released few details about the deportees in Eswatini, who are from diverse countries including Vietnam, Laos and Cuba. One -- a Jamaican -- was repatriated in September.

After being refused access by prison authorities, Nhlabatsi turned to the High Court which in early October agreed that local lawyers should be allowed to visit the detainees.

But the government appealed the ruling and “that access has not yet been facilitated,” said Nhlabatsi, who is in his mid-40s.

To read more of this report, click here

https://iol.co.za/news/africa/2025-11-07-us-deportations-like-a-kidnapping-says-eswatini-lawyer/

See also

 

How a tiny African absolute monarchy can play a ‘vital role’ in US national security: expert (Fox News, US)

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/how-tiny-african-absolute-monarchy-can-play-vital-role-us-national-security-expert

 

Inside the eSwatini ‘jungle’ prison holding US deportees

By AFP, 7 November 2025

SOURCE 

Few places in the small African kingdom of Eswatini have a more feared reputation than the Matsapha Correctional Centre, a high-security sprawl of concrete and rust outside the capital, Mbabane.

“It’s like a jungle,” a former detainee told AFP of the prison that is holding 14 men deported from the United States in the Trump administration’s crackdown on migrants.

For decades, the prison has embodied the repressive policies of the southern African nation, routinely used to silence critics and pro-democracy activists.

Now, as the United States expels foreign nationals, the prison has an additional and just as troubling role, lawyers say.

Africa’s last absolute monarchy has agreed to accept up to 160 US deportees in exchange for $5.1 million to strengthen its border and migration systems, according to a deal seen by AFP.

“Life is not easy in there,” said former detainee Elvis Vusi Mazibuko, who spent more than two decades at Matsapha on robbery and car theft convictions.

“It’s survival of the fittest,” the soft-spoken 64-year-old told AFP, recalling tensions flaring over minor disputes in cramped cells.

The first five US deportees were jailed at the prison in July, with one later repatriated to his native Jamaica.

Washington branded them “depraved monsters” convicted of crimes including child rape and murder. Lawyers told AFP they had already served their time in the United States.

Ten more arrived in October, according to the Eswatini government, which says it intends to repatriate them all.

They are being held without charge and access to legal counsel, according to an AFP investigation.

Washington has also sent deportees to other African countries such as Ghana, Rwanda and South Sudan.

A veteran prison warden told AFP there was unease over the US deportees.

“We haven’t been trained to handle prisoners like these,” he said on condition of anonymity. “We don’t have the equipment either.”

“If America couldn’t keep them, what can a mere Swaziland do?” he asked, using the landlocked country’s former name.

Matsapha is divided neatly between medium- and maximum-security wings.

New blocks funded by the deal with Washington, and where the US deportees are held, are on the minimum-security side, another officer said.

Unlike the older blocks where inmates share toilets in dormitories of bunk beds in rows, the new cells come with individual bathrooms and mounted televisions. The walls are transparent, allowing for constant surveillance.

There are concerns that the new wing could also be used to house political dissenters.

“We are a country that does not foster political participation,” said lawyer Mzwandile Masuku, who has challenged the deportations in court.

“We will find more Swazis being accommodated in these newly constructed structures than addressing the problems that we have,” he said.

To read the full report, click here

https://iol.co.za/news/world/2025-11-07-inside-the-eswatini-jungle-prison-holding-us-deportees/

 

‘Titimela’ threaten development, sanitation, promote crime

By Mnelisi Dlamini, Times of eSwatini, 10 November 2025

SOURCE

MBABANE: The rapid rise of informal ‘titimela’ settlements is creating major development, crime and health challenges across the country.

The mushrooming of informal one-room houses, commonly known as titimela, in and around the country’s industrial areas has become one of Eswatini’s most pressing development challenges.

These unplanned structures have spread rapidly around Matsapha, Ezulwini, Sidvokodvo and parts of Manzini’s peri-urban areas like KaShali, Nhlambeni, Sicelwini, Makholweni and Ticantfwini. They are reshaping orderly commercial landscapes into congested, unregulated settlements.

What began as affordable housing for low-income factory, manufacturing and retail workers has evolved into a national problem frustrating town councils, chiefs and government ministries.

Local authorities report that the titimela are multiplying rapidly, with some areas witnessing overnight construction of makeshift dwellings built too close together and often without sanitation.

“We are seeing the birth of unplanned mini-towns around our industrial hubs. These structures are not part of any approved layout plan, making it extremely difficult to provide essential services such as water, sewerage and roads,” said one Matsapha council representative.

Government and utility companies are already feeling the effects. Utilities are facing these challenges as they seek to improve service delivery in places like Matsapha, where some structures are encroaching on the road, posing a threat to future expansion of the road network as well.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.times.co.sz/news/readmore.php?bhsadjgfoh=%E2%80%98Titimela%E2%80%99+threaten+development%2C+sanitation%2C+promote+crime&yiphi=1748&bvhdgsj=News

 

eSwatini’s youth and women farmers thrive under FAO-led resilience project

FAO Regional Office for Africa, 7 November 2025

SOURCE 

From the vegetable fields of Luve to the highlands of Nkhaba, Eswatini’s youth and women farmers are writing a new chapter in the country’s agricultural story. Supported by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) through the Technical Cooperation Project (TCP/ESW/3903), young smallholders are shifting from subsistence to commercial production, building resilience against climate shocks, and accessing new markets through innovation.

In partnership with the Government of Eswatini and the National Agricultural Marketing Board (NAMBoard), FAO is helping farmers adopt protected agriculture technologies, such as shade nets and greenhouses, that safeguard crops from harsh weather, reduce losses, and allow year-round production. The initiative falls under FAO’s One Country One Priority Product (OCOP) approach, which promotes sustainable production and value chain development for strategic crops.

“Our collaboration with the Government and NAMBoard is transforming smallholder farming into a viable business that sustains livelihoods and supports national food security,” said Cuthbert Kambanje, FAO Subregional Agrofood Systems Investment Policy Support Consultant.

Through the project, youth and women-led cooperatives have been trained in modern horticultural practices, marketing, and quality standards. Many have since been absorbed by NAMBoard’s commercial supply chains, supplying supermarkets and export buyers with high-quality produce such as peppers and lettuce.

In Nkhaba, Hhohho region, a youth-led cooperative demonstrates the success of this approach. “Protected agriculture allows us to produce even during dry spells. We no longer fear losing everything to drought,” said a local farmer proudly displaying her harvest of bell peppers.

The project also strengthens extension services through NAMBoard, ensuring continuous technical support for smallholders. The results have been transformative, enhanced food security, improved household incomes, and empowered youth who now see agriculture as a dignified and profitable career.

FAO’s work in Eswatini supports the country’s broader goals under Agenda 2030 and Vision 2022, particularly in achieving SDG 2 – Zero Hunger. By focusing on market access and climate-smart production, the initiative is building resilience and economic opportunity for rural communities. Turning partnership into progress.

 

A section of unplanned housing located between Eteni and Logoba in Matsapha. (Courtesy pic)

Running for nothing: the cruel arithmetic of unemployment in eSwatini

Comment by Eugene Wa-Dube, Swati Newsweek, 12 November, 2025

SOURCE 

In a country where youth unemployment hovers at catastrophic levels, logic and fairness - not corruption - should guide every decision that touches the lives of the young.

Yet, the recent spectacle in Eswatini where hundreds of young men and women in different tinkhundla/constituencies were invited for recruitment in the army, by undergoing a number of tests including physical tests - such as running for three kilometers or so - contesting for a mere three available positions in the army - is a sobering reminder of how far we have strayed from reason and justice.

Hundreds of young people. Three posts. Those numbers alone tell a painful story. They tell of a nation where opportunity has become so rare that even the faintest whisper of a job summons hundreds to queue under the blazing sun. They tell of desperation so deep that our youth will run, sweat, and strain - not for glory, but for a chance, however small and hopeless, to escape the suffocating grip of unemployment.

Let’s be clear: no one questions the right of the army to recruit. But recruitment must serve a purpose beyond public humiliation. Inviting close to a thousand hopefuls for only three vacancies is not recruitment; it is emotional cruelty disguised as national service. It is the conversion of hope into a spectator sport - a televised reminder that in Eswatini, the dream of dignified work has become a privilege for the few.

The logic behind such an exercise is deeply flawed. In an economy struggling to create jobs, such spectacles only expose the failure to plan and prioritize. They reveal a state more comfortable showcasing scarcity than addressing it. What exactly is achieved when hundreds of young people exhaust themselves in blistering summer heat in a contest whose outcome was always predetermined by mathematics - or something else like nepotism, cronyism, connections, etc?

Beyond the numbers lies the moral question. Fairness demands that opportunities be distributed transparently and realistically. How can it be fair to raise expectations among so many, knowing only three per Inkhundla will succeed?

Worse, what confidence can the public have in the process, when rumours persist that selections are often influenced by personal connections, nephew, cronyism or political proximity rather than merit? When meritocracy collapses, disillusionment takes its place - and that is a dangerous currency in any society.

Eswatini’s youth are not lazy. They are not entitled. They are, in fact, the most underutilized resource this nation has. They have shown time and again that given a chance - whether in the arts, entrepreneurship, or community service - they rise to the occasion. But they need a system that values their energy, not one that exploits their desperation.

True patriotism today would mean designing programs that absorb this restless potential into nation-building. We need youth cooperatives in agriculture, technology incubators, local infrastructure projects, and skills training centres that produce doers, not job-seekers. Instead of summoning a thousand bodies for three uniforms, why not summon a thousand minds to build the industries of tomorrow?

This episode is not merely about the army. It is about the kind of leadership we tolerate - leadership that prefers managing the optics of scarcity rather than confronting its causes. When the state uses hope as a prop, it erodes public trust. When it treats desperation as entertainment, it undermines dignity. EmaSwati are humans - not objects of derision to be as taken advantage of just because they are desperate.

Eswatini’s future cannot be built on spectacles of hopelessness - corruption. It must be built on deliberate, inclusive, and humane economic planning. Anything less is an insult to the generation we claim to be grooming for tomorrow.

That's the honest and unadulterated truth. Can this anomaly be fixed before the ticking youth unemployed bomb explodes, blowing everyone and everything in its way to pieces?

 

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