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Friday, 23 January 2026

Swaziland Newsletter No. 911 – 23 January 2026

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 911 – 23 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.

 

80% women neglect children for jobs

By Nokuphila Haji, eSwatini Observer, 16 January 2026

SOURCE 

The deputy prime minister’s office has revealed that 80% of the cases handled under the Asibambaneni SibeNgumndeni programme involved women who had neglected their children while seeking employment opportunities.

This is contained in findings from a report compiled by the office, following visits to affected families.

When speaking during an Eswatini TV Programme, Kusile Breakfast Show, Senior Gender Analyst Thandwa Dlamini said the findings showed that many families were experiencing severe economic hardship, forcing caregivers to seek employment away from home.

She said women, who traditionally carry the burden of caregiving, often face difficult choices after childbirth, including leaving children behind in search of work.

She said 80% of the cases involved women neglecting their children, noting that the analysis revealed widespread struggles among women in communities to adequately care for their children.

Dlamini added that, in many cases, this neglect was a survival strategy, as women who lacked the means to support their children often took them to their grandparents, who then became the primary caregivers.

“There is also a gender-based violence component, because in most cases women who are abused run away from perpetrators, leaving the child behind becomes a form of protection for themselves and the child from future abuse,” she said.

To read more of this report, click here

https://eswatiniobserver.com/80-women-neglect-children-for-jobs/

 

eSwatini’s health workers call medical delivery drone network ‘revolutionary’

By Zimkhitha Mbulawa, Gavi, Vaccines Work, 21 January 2026

SOURCE

Health worker receives drone-delivered medications in Eswatini. Credit: Nkwe

Eswatini has joined the growing roster of African countries relying on medical drones for delivery of vaccines and other health commodities to their remotest communities.

But the Nkwe Drone Network comes with an important difference. Rather than dropping their payload by parachute, Nkwe drones land – meaning they can pick up sensitive cargo, such as blood samples, at the last mile.

Representatives of the organisation behind the Nkwe Drone Network say drone flights are typically six times faster than grounded medical transport, at a competitive cost.

Eswatini’s remotest districts are not only under-served in terms of hospital infrastructure: the delivery of vaccines, meds, antivirals and emergency bloodwork samples is constrained too. During the annual flood-prone seasons, things get dire.

That’s where Nkwe Drone Network – the kingdom’s first authorised medical drone network, which did over 600 flights in just its first year – jumps in.

The name “Nkwe” means “sprint” in siSwati, and was conferred upon the unmanned fleet by the kingdom’s health minister, Mduduzi Matsebula, at the official launch ceremony in June 2024.

“[Using] drone deliveries instead of roads has really helped a lot of us as a clinic in the vaccination of kids, adults, treatments, HIV tests, urgent bloodwork,” said Lomalungelo Mavuso, a community health worker who has served at Ngculwini Nazarene Clinic since 2017. Ngculwini is a rural healthcare centre in the northwest of Eswatini.

The people behind the drone initiative are The Luke Commission (TLC), a US-founded non-profit healthcare organisation operating in Eswatini for the last 20 years, and providing everything from cataract surgeries to HIV care.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.gavi.org/vaccineswork/eswatini-health-workers-call-medical-delivery-drone-network-revolutionary

 

Scramble to seize control of the media is a new ‘political corona virus’ affecting Swazi journalism but, it’s curable

Opinion by Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 18 January, 2026

SOURCE 

It is public knowledge that my journey as a journalist has been going through a rough road of course, with potholes that smooth surfaces but, I’ve learned that “being hated by a dictatorship Government automatically gives one credibility in the eyes of the international community”.

The credibility arose from fact that, most international organizations are fully aware that, any undemocratic Government that strives on secrecy perceives the independent media as an enemy because, sometimes it reports critical news that does not favour the State.

It is for these reasons, the more the independent media is rebuked by the Eswatini Government, the more it gains international recognition and support because, most international organizations wants diversity of news and, those news cannot be disseminated in a more diverse way, if all publications are controlled by the State.

The media is facing challenges not only in Eswatini but within the African continent, it’s just that in Eswatini you find even very stupid people like King’s Interpreter Sihle Dlamini telling the media what to write, these fools think just because they work with King Mswati, then they have all the powers to tell journalists how to do their job.

The media is actually facing a political ‘corona virus’ but it’s curable.

It’s not only Sihle Dlamini, even “Sibutseki from eMalawini nasifake emajobo nje nemhelwane locotfukile” can just invade the newsroom claiming to be there to deliver an order from the King and block a story.

But maybe there’s nothing wrong with these royal lunatics invading Eswatini newsrooms to block stories because some media companies are owned by royalty or the Government, but the problem starts when they demonstrate a political appetite to control even the Swaziland News that is registered and operating in South Africa.

It should be noted that, there was a strategic reason why this publication was registered in the neighboring South Africa, one of the reasons was to force anyone seeking to challenge it in court, to approach the South African independent courts not the Swazi courts and if that person has a genuine case, that matter will be handled by independent Judges.

Eswatini Government lost a case against this publication at the Mpumalanga Court, there’s no way in South Africa where lunatics can just wake-up in the morning and decide to silence the media, maybe in the Spaza Swazi courts.

The Swaziland News will report anything critical about the Eswatini Government and the royal family, lunatics like King’s Interpreter Sihle Dlamini will do absolutely nothing to silence this publication except to read and enjoy critical articles.

Why those who claim to be ignoring this publication are the first ones to know what the Swaziland News has published and, other platforms learn through Sihle Dlamini’s platform that some public figures are responding to this publication.

This means Sihle Dlamini is a loyal reader of this publication, almost every five (5) minutes he is reading this publication.

Now that Facebook has approved Swaziland News to earn money through articles, Sihle Dlamini will contribute to the online revenue generation for this publication. Siyabonga kuMtukulu weMtukulu, we-Mntfwanenkhosi Njebovu.  

 

Why attend? Tariff hike will happen anyway - residents

By Khulile Thwala, Times of eSwatini, 21 January 2026

SOURCE 

NHLANGANO: Poor attendance marked the electricity tariff consultation held at Bethesda Church in Nhlangano, with residents attributing the low turnout to public fatigue.

Despair and a growing belief that tariff hikes are implemented regardless of public submissions were also attributed to the low numbers.

The tariff hike proposal public hearings are being hosted by the Eswatini Electricity Regulatory Authority (ESERA) in conjunction with the Eswatini Electricity Company (EEC).

Nhlangano-stationed Pensioners Association representative Ntombi Dlamini pointed out that it was unfortunate that many people failed to attend a consultation dealing with an issue that directly affected their daily survival.

“When I tried to raise this issue and encouraged people to attend the consultations, many of my colleagues and acquaintances accused me of financially abusing them,” said Ntombi.

She explained that even when she contacted pensioners ahead of the consultation to remind them to attend, the response was largely negative.

“They told me that these consultations are harassment, and by pressuring them to attend I was abusing them because they cannot afford the proposed electricity hike,” she said.

According to Ntombi, this sentiment explained the poor attendance at the meeting.

“I attend these consultations regularly, but today there is an evident poor turnout because people are now shunning these sessions,” she said.

She stressed that pensioners were adamant that they would not cope should the proposed tariff hike be implemented.

Ntombi lamented the meagre monthly income some pensioners received, stating that it was already insufficient to meet basic needs, even before factoring in increased electricity costs.

“If the little we earn is already pinched just to make ends meet, where will we get money for more expensive electricity units?” she asked.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.times.co.sz/news/readmore.php?bhsadjgfoh=Why+attend%3F+Tariff+hike+will+happen+anyway+-+residents&yiphi=2609&bvhdgsj=News

 

eSwatini records world’s highest cervical cancer death rate

By Sibusiso Dlamini, eSwatini Observer, 18 January 2026

SOURCE

The country’s health system is facing another grave test.

As the kingdom grapples with an acute drug shortage crisis while being named among those with the highest suicide rates globally, new data now places the country at the very top of a far more lethal league table: cervical cancer deaths.

According to statistics drawn from World Population Review figures for 2026, the country records the highest cervical cancer burden in the world, with an incidence rate of 57.8 per 100 000 women.

The country’s crude incidence rate far exceeds that of neighbouring states already considered high-risk.

Lesotho follows at 49.9, Malawi at 42.8, Zimbabwe at 39.2, and Comoros at 38.8. South Africa, by comparison, records 35.6.

Even more alarming is the cumulative risk, as a girl born in the country today faces an 8.6% chance of developing cervical cancer by the age of 74 if current trends persist. This is among the highest lifetime risks recorded globally.

All in all, Southern Africa dominates the list of countries with the highest cervical cancer rates, reflecting shared challenges. Malawi (42.8), Zimbabwe (39.2) and Mozambique (33.1) all feature prominently, as do Zambia and Tanzania further north.

In public health terms, these figures, according to medical doctor and Ekuphileni Clinic Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Dr Advocate Dlamini, place the country in a category of extreme vulnerability.

Dr Dlamini’s explanation for the country’s alarmingly high cervical cancer death rate is that too many girls are being exposed to sex far too early, when their bodies are not ready to fight the virus that causes the disease.

“Cervical cancer is caused by a sexually transmitted virus known as the human papillomavirus (HPV). Not all HPV types are dangerous, but types 16 and 18 are responsible for most cervical cancer cases worldwide. Once the virus enters the body, it can quietly damage cervical cells over time, eventually turning them cancerous,” he explained.

To read more of this report, click here

https://eswatiniobserver.com/eswatini-records-worlds-highest-cervical-cancer-death-rate/

 

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