Search This Blog

Friday, 9 January 2026

Swaziland Newsletter No. 909 – 9 January 2026

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 909 – 9 January 2026

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.

 

WHO warns eSwatini has world’s highest male suicide rate

By Sibusiso Dlamini, eSwatini Observer, 4 January 4, 2026

SOURCE 

Eswatini has recorded the highest male suicide rates in the world, placing the country at the centre of a deepening public health emergency that the World Health Organisation (WHO) says demands immediate, coordinated national action.

Globally, the kingdom ranks second overall for suicide, with men accounting for about 80% of completed cases.

This assessment has been highlighted by BIO50+, a research and briefing platform, which analysed the WHO’s Q3 2025 public health briefing for Eswatini, that warns that suicide rates in the kingdom have reached levels that can no longer be treated as a marginal or isolated health concern.

Instead, the agency frames it as a systemic national challenge with implications for health policy, social cohesion and economic stability.

According to the WHO briefing, men bear a disproportionate share of suicide deaths in the country, accounting for roughly four out of every five completed cases.

The imbalance mirrors a broader global pattern, but is far more pronounced in the kingdom, pushing the country to the top of global rankings for male suicide mortality.

Data compiled from health facilities and law enforcement between 2021 and 2025 point to hundreds of suicide-related cases, with the majority involving adults aged 25 and above.

While women and adolescents are also affected, the scale among men has raised particular concern among public health experts, who link the trend to social expectations around masculinity, economic pressure and low rates of help-seeking for mental distress.

The WHO cautions that these figures likely underestimate the true scale of the problem, as suicides are often underreported due to stigma, misclassification of deaths and gaps in community level surveillance, particularly in rural areas.

“The rising number of suicides in Eswatini is a serious public health concern that requires urgent and coordinated action,” the WHO has warned, calling on government, communities, institutions and the media to treat prevention as a shared national responsibility.

To read more of this report, click here

https://eswatiniobserver.com/who-warns-eswatini-has-worlds-highest-male-suicide-rate/


Parents frustrated as most urban schools full

By Siphosethu Dlamini and Sabelo Majola, Times of eSwatini, 8 January 2026

SOURCE 

MBABANE: With the new academic year just days away, parents are still desperately searching for spaces for their children, while head teachers maintain that most schools are already full.

Across Mbabane and surrounding areas, anxious parents were seen moving from one school to another in a last-minute rush to secure placements, particularly for pupils entering Form I. At several schools visited yesterday, long queues formed outside administration blocks as parents waited from dawn, hoping to be among the few lucky ones to secure spaces.

Others were seen clutching envelopes, ready to make immediate payments should an opportunity arise. However, many schools have reached full capacity and are no longer accepting new admissions.

At St Mark’s High School Head Teacher Khanyisile ‘Baah’ Shabangu confirmed that registration closed at 3pm yesterday for pupils who had already passed their entrance interviews. She revealed that only about 30 spaces were available on Monday for those who met the school’s admission requirements and those slots had since been filled.

“Ninety-five per cent of the admitted pupils have already paid their fees. Even if a few do not return, the number of available spaces will still be very limited,” said Shabangu.

She added that while she sympathised with parents who continue to visit the school despite being informed that spaces are full, there was little the school could do due to infrastructure and resource limitations.

“We wish we could take them all in, but our facilities simply cannot accommodate more learners. The only chance some parents have is the eventuality of a few admitted pupils not showing up by the 3pm deadline,” she said.

A similar situation was observed at Ka-Boyce High School, where parents said they had arrived as early as 6am hoping to be assisted. However, school officials told them that all spaces had been filled.

The Deputy Head Teacher at Ka-Boyce, Nathi Nkambule, said: “It is very disturbing and painful to be turning parents away, as we know they wish for their children to learn here, but it is beyond our control. We had hoped to admit 135 pupils for Form I, planning three classes of 45 learners maximum, but we have long surpassed that.”

One parent, when asked why he remained at the school despite being told the school was full, said: “We were told the school is full, but we’re still waiting, hoping something changes.” He requested anonymity.

To read more of this report, click here

https://times.co.sz/news/readmore.php?bhsadjgfoh=Parents+frustrated+as+most+urban+schools+full&yiphi=2444&bvhdgsj=News

 

PUDEMO notes escalating number of deaths amid shortage of drugs in public hospitals

By Bongiwe Dlamini, Swaziland News, 1 January, 2026

SOURCE 

MBABANE: The People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO) has noted with great concern the escalating number of deaths in the country amid shortage of drugs in public hospitals.

In a New Year Statement released by Deputy Secretary General (DSG) Maxwell Dlamini and sent to this Swaziland News, the Eswatini main liberation movement said the public healthcare system “remains” in a state of collapse.

“The public healthcare system remains in a state of collapse. Hospitals and clinics across the country, including Mbabane Government Hospital, Raleigh Fitkin Memorial Hospital, and facilities in Shiselweni and Lubombo are characterized by chronic drug shortages, broken equipment, and understaffing and corruption-ridden procurement systems. PUDEMO notes with deep anger the shocking increase in the number of Swazi families who have unnecessarily lost their loved ones in public hospitals. These deaths are not inevitable; they are the result of neglect and mis-governance. The government’s failure to consistently provide dialysis services has condemned patients to slow and painful deaths, while the permanent absence of blood at the national blood bank has turned routine medical emergencies into death sentences,” said the PUDEMO Deputy Secretary General.

On another note, PUDEMO further condemned the continued plight of un-hired doctors and medical professionals, alongside interns who have remained in compulsory internships for over two years without salaries, while communities die for lack of care. 

“This is not incompetence, it is criminal neglect of public duty,” reads the statement in part.

See also

PUDEMO blames Tinkhundla undemocratic Government amid escalating Gender Based Violence (Swaziland News)

http://www.swazilandnews.co.za/fundza.php?nguyiphi=11007

 

Rife child sexual abuse exposes home vulnerability

By Bongiwe Dlamini, eSwatini Observer, 5 January 2026

SOURCE 

The arrest of three men in separate rape cases, including fathers and stepfathers allegedly sexually abusing their daughters, indicates the continued exposure of children to grave harm within spaces meant to offer protection.

The cases happened at Bhunya and Malkerns. Bhunya police arrested two suspects in connection with separate rape cases.

In one case, a 42-year-old man from Zondwako was charged under the Sexual Offences and Domestic Violence (SODV) Act for allegedly repeatedly raping his biological daughter (19). The police said investigations indicated that the abuse occurred over five years, from 2020 to 2025, when the girl was 14 years old.

In a report, the police alleged that the suspect exploited the victim’s innocence by raping her in his consultation room (indumba) and manipulating her into believing that the acts were culturally acceptable.

He allegedly told her that it was customary for a girl to engage in sexual relations with relatives first and further allegedly threatened to kill her if she disclosed the abuse.

The matter came to light after the victim discovered that she was pregnant. She reportedly confided in her mother, who then involved her uncles.

On December 31, 2025, one of the uncles is said to have escorted her to the Manzini One Stop Centre, where the case was reported and later transferred to Bhunya police, leading to the suspect’s arrest.

In a separate case, Bhunya police also arrested a 24-year-old man from Mangcongco in connection with the alleged rape of a 16-year-old girl from the same area.

The two suspects appeared before the Manzini Magistrate’s Court last Friday, where they were remanded in custody pending the setting of their trial dates.

Meanwhile, the Malkerns police arrested a 37-year-old man from Ndinda in connection with the alleged sexual abuse of his stepdaughter.

The victim, a 17-year-old girl from Timbutini, was reportedly abused for nearly two years between 2023 and 2025.

To read more of this report, click here

https://eswatiniobserver.com/rife-child-sexual-abuse-exposes-home-vulnerability/

 

MPs visit paving way for ex-MP’s release amid United Nations pressure

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 2 January, 2026

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Mduduzi Bacede Mabuza, the convicted pro-democracy ex-Eswatini Member of Parliament (MP) might soon be released as the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNRC) Working Group deadline approaches. 

In a ‘ruling’ seen and previously reported by this publication, the UN Working Group gave the Kingdom of Eswatini a six (6) months ultimatum from October 2025 to release Mabuza and ex-MP Mthandeni Dube or else, the unlawful and/or politically motivated conviction will be escalated with the higher structures of the United Nations.

The United Nations Working Group investigates cases of deprivation of liberty imposed arbitrarily or inconsistently with the international standards set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, or the international legal instruments accepted by the States concerned.

But the UN Working Group communicated the ruling or report to King Mswati’s Government on the 15th October 2025 after investigating the politically motivated conviction of MPs Bacede Mabuza and Mthandeni Dube.

Subsequent and/or after receiving the directive, the King released MP Mthandeni Dube after tricking him through Justice Minister Prince Simelane to apologize while MP Mduduzi Bacede Mabuza is still behind bars at Matsapha Prison for politically motivated crimes he never committed. 

The pro-democracy MPs were unlawfully convicted by Judge Mumcy Dlamini who is married to a royal family member Prince Majahenkhaba and, the Judge was allegedly acting on orders or directive issued by King Mswati.

But as per an investigation report previously published by this Swaziland News, a delegation of MPs accompanied by King’s Protocol Officer Khandlela Mdluli subsequently visited ex-MP Mduduzi Bacede Mabuza at Matsapha Correctional Complex this week.

But even though the delegation claimed to have gone to Matsapha Correctional Complex to visit inmates as part of the Christmas celebration, this journalist subsequently gathered that ex-MP Bacede Mabuza was “again negotiated to apologize” to King Mswati and be immediately released.

Eswatini is an absolute Monarchy, the then MPs Mabuza and Dube MPs were arrested merely for demanding democracy and subsequently charged with terrorism, murder and other fabricated politically motivated criminal charges.

Phindile Dlamini, the Commissioner General of the Correctional Services declined to comment about the meetings held to discuss the release of the pro-democracy MP.

But sources within the corridors of powers told this publication that, appointed MP Prince Lindani is allegedly leading the process of attempting to force or convince ex-MP Mabuza to apologise to his father Mswati and be released.

“Attempts to intimidate him failed as he refused to apologise and now, the strategy is to be polite and negotiate him to before the UN deadline,” said a high profile insider within the corridors of power.

But Madala Mhlanga, the Deputy Speaker in the House of Assembly previously told this publication that, the delegation of MPs accompanied by King’s Protocol Officer Khandlela Mdluli visited ex-MP Mduduzi Bacede Mabuza and other high profile inmates just to demonstrate love and appreciate them as members of the society despite their past ‘mistakes’.

The Deputy Speaker together with Kwaluseni MP Sifiso Shongwe donated soccer kits to the Matsapha inmates soccer team.


MPs visited convicted pro-democracy MP Bacede Mabuza who was arrested for demanding democracy in the undemocratic Kingdom of Eswatini


See also

MPs visit Bacede, Sipho Shongwe in prison (eSwatini Observer)

https://eswatiniobserver.com/mps-visit-bacede-sipho-shongwe-in-prison/

 

 

 

SWAZI MEDIA COMMENTARY

Find us:

Blog: https://swazimedia.blogspot.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/142383985790674

 

No comments: