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Friday, 26 June 2026

Swaziland Newsletter No. 932 – 26 June 2026

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 932 – 26 June 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.

 

eSwatini unemployment falls to 33.5 percent

APA, 23 June 2026

SOURCE 

Eswatini has recorded a decline in unemployment over the past two years, with the 2025 Labour Force Survey showing joblessness easing from 35.4 percent in 2023 to 33.5 percent in 2025, signalling a modest improvement in the country’s labour market.

Labour and Social Security Minister Phila Buthelezi released the survey findings on Monday, noting that the latest data reflects progress in efforts to expand economic opportunities and strengthen livelihoods.

Youth unemployment dropped from 56 percent to 52.2 percent while female unemployment declined from 37.6 percent to 36.4 percent, offering what officials described as early signs of recovery in a labour market still under pressure.

Officials say the findings will guide evidence‑based policies aimed at accelerating job creation and reducing vulnerabilities that can fuel social unrest.

 

eSwatini’s civic freedoms on trial in landmark LGBTI rights legal battle

By Khanyo Farisè, Daily Maverick (South Africa), 22 June 2026

SOURCE 

For seven years the Eswatini Sexual and Gender Minorities group has fought the Swazi government for its citizens to have the right to freedom of association. But this is a hard fight against a government and king who believe LGBTI people have no place in the kingdom and who are trying to restrict the power of civil society organisations.

 

In Eswatini’s second biggest city of Manzini, Sisanda Mavimbela is once again preparing for court.

As the Co-Director of Programmes and Advocacy for Eswatini Sexual and Gender Minorities (ESGM), a group which works to advance LGBTI rights, Sisanda has become all too familiar with the ritual of gathering documents, revisiting judgments, speaking to lawyers and asking the courts, again, to affirm what should never have been in dispute: that everyone has a right to freedom of association.

ESGM has been fighting in the courts for this constitutional right since 2019, when its application to register as a non-profit organisation was first rejected. After challenging the decision in the high court, ESGM eventually secured a landmark Supreme Court ruling in 2023 which declared that the registrar’s approach was unconstitutional and ordered the relevant minister to reconsider the application.

In his reconsideration, the minister of commerce, industry and trade in September 2024 declined ESGM’s application on the basis that Swazi “customary law does not recognise same-sex relationships”.

In August 2025, ESGM again approached the courts challenging the minister’s grounds for rejecting its application. The matter is still before the courts, but ESGM has made it clear that it has no intention of backing down.

Under international human rights law, the right to freedom of association guarantees the rights of all individuals, without discrimination, to form associations and to jointly carry out activities or pursue common goals. Restricting this right is a repressive tactic that undermines human rights in general and, in this case, with a discriminatory impact. The government in Eswatini has used such tactics to restrict civil society organisations which play a vital role in scrutinising state power, documenting abuses, and mobilising public debate.

In Eswatini, the struggle for LGBTI rights is also a struggle for civic freedom. As the government intensifies its attacks on civic space, LGBTI groups are once again being presented as a threat to culture and national identity. King Mswati III and other senior officials have repeatedly denounced LGBTI people in the name of preserving “Swazi culture”.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2026-06-22-eswatinis-civic-freedoms-on-trial-in-landmark-lgbti-rights-legal-battle/

See also

eSwatini’s civic freedoms on trial in landmark LGBTI rights legal battle (Daily Maverick)

https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2026-06-22-eswatinis-civic-freedoms-on-trial-in-landmark-lgbti-rights-legal-battle/

 

Alleged illegal foreigners fleeing to eSwatini ahead of June 30 ‘March and March’ protests in South Africa

By Musa Mdluli, Swaziland News, 20 June 2026

SOURCE 

MBABANE: State security officers working and patrolling the Eswatini border with South Africa are reportedly arresting more foreigners trying to cross over to the tiny Kingdom ahead of the “June 30 March and March” deadline.

As a result, Eswatini might face yet another influx of foreigners crisis a few weeks after the police arrested about two hundred (200) Chinese nationals who entered the country illegally and engaged in illegal gambling and extortion.

According to sources within the Army, this coming week, more arrested foreigners will appear in court after being caught crossing the border illegally to the Kingdom of Eswatini.
Acting Government Spokesperson Thabile Mdluli was not immediately available for a comment.

Eswatini has been facing the influx of foreigners for some time now and recently, about 200 Chinese nationals appeared in court, they were charged and subsequently convicted for entering the country illegally.

See also

First group of foreign nationals deported (Times of eSwatini)

https://times.co.sz/news/readmore.php?bhsadjgfoh=First+group+of+foreign+nationals+deported&yiphi=4291&bvhdgsj=News

 

FPE grant delays push primary schools into crisis

By Mnelisi Dlamini, Times of eSwatini, 19 June 2026

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Public primary schools across Eswatini are facing a severe financial crisis following the Ministry of Education and Training’s prolonged delay in disbursing free primary education (FPE) grants specifically designated for Grade 1 pupils.

The ongoing funding hitch has left head teachers stranded midway through the 2026 academic calendar. Compounding the crisis is government’s crackdown on top-up fees, leaving school administrators barred from requesting emergency contributions from parents, yet they lack the funds required to keep their institutions running.

Under the Free Primary Education Act of 2010, government is constitutionally mandated to cover tuition, stationery and learning materials for all primary school pupils. While the ministry recently announced successful FPE rollout for higher grades, Grade I disbursements have faced systemic delays, starving schools of critical early-year operational capital.

Speaking on condition of anonymity in fear of professional reprisal, one head teacher said: “We are effectively running on empty. Grade I represent our largest intake this year. Without their FPE grants, we cannot buy fundamental items like exercise books, chalk, or even basic cleaning detergents. I have had to beg local suppliers to give us cleaning chemicals on credit just so we can maintain proper hygiene in the ablution blocks.”

The financial squeeze is felt just as acutely in rural communities, where alternative resources are non-existent. A head teacher from a community school in northern Hhohho explained how the funding delay has crippled daily operations.

“The ministry expects us to run schools like standard businesses, but they have cut off our working capital. We cannot pay our electricity bills or maintain our school feeding programme kitchen properly. When we try to explain this to the regional education office (REO), we are simply told to wait. But the children cannot wait to learn, and the bills certainly do not wait.”



To read more of this report, click here

https://www.times.co.sz/news/readmore.php?bhsadjgfoh=FPE+grant+delays+push+primary+schools+into+crisis&yiphi=4258&bvhdgsj=News

 

Correctional facilities overcrowded, there’s shortage of officers – Minister

By Melisa Msweli, eSwatini Observer, 20 June 2026

SOURCE 

Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs Prince Simelane has reported that the country’s correctional facilities remain overcrowded and in a dilapidated state, adding that the cramped conditions could easily facilitate the spread of airborne diseases should an outbreak occur.

Reporting to His Majesty King Mswati III during the Correctional Services Day celebrations held at His Majesty Correctional Services Staff College, Prince Simelane said the correctional system continued to face a number of challenges, chief among them being inadequate infrastructure and a shortage of correctional officers.

He said the shortage of officers was a matter of concern, describing correctional officers as ‘the fence of the country’ and emphasising that they were critical to maintaining safety and security within correctional institutions.

The minister further reported a shortage of staff housing for correctional officers, saying this remained one of the issues requiring urgent attention.

Despite these challenges, Prince Simelane expressed gratitude for the peace prevailing in the country, noting that national events such as the Correctional Services Day were possible because of the stability enjoyed by the country.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.eswatiniobserver.com/correctional-facilities-overcrowded-theres-shortage-of-officers-minister/

 

SWAZI MEDIA COMMENTARY

Find us:

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

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

 

Friday, 19 June 2026

Swaziland Newsletter No. 931 – 19 June 2026

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 931 – 19 June 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. 

 

Govt calls for united action to end gender-based violence as cases rise

By Gcwalisile Mhlabane, eSwatini Positive News, 17 June 2026

SOURCE 

SIDVOKODVO: The Kingdom of Eswatini is stepping up national efforts to address the growing challenge of gender-based violence, as government and stakeholders call for stronger coordination and collective action to protect vulnerable groups. With cases continuing to rise, leaders have emphasized the need for urgent and sustained intervention across all sectors of society.

This call was made during the two-day National Gender-Based Violence Symposium/Indaba held on June 17–18, 2026 at the TLC Auditorium in Sidvokodvo, where government leaders, law enforcement officials, development partners, civil society organisations, and community representatives gathered to strengthen coordinated responses and improve national protection systems.

The symposium is focused on reinforcing prevention strategies, improving survivor support services, and enhancing institutional coordination to ensure a more effective and long-term response to gender-based violence.

Opening the engagement, Deputy Prime Minister Senator Thulisile Dladla called for collective responsibility across all sectors of society, emphasizing that ending gender-based violence requires courage, accountability, and sustained action.

She urged government institutions, traditional leaders, families, faith-based organisations, men, and young people to work together in protecting vulnerable groups and supporting survivors.

“Building safe communities requires more than condemnation of violence; it requires action. It requires courage to speak out, commitment to intervene, and determination to hold perpetrators accountable. It requires us to create environments where survivors are believed, supported, protected, and empowered to rebuild their lives,” she said.

A key highlight of the symposium was the presentation of national statistics by the National Commissioner of Police, Vusie Manoma Masango, who described the situation as a national emergency requiring urgent and united action.

To read more of this report, click here

https://eswatinipositivenews.online/govt-calls-for-united-action-to-end-gender-based-violence-as-cases-rise/

 

See also

GBV claims 22 lives in 3 months (Times of eSwatini)

https://www.times.co.sz/news/readmore.php?bhsadjgfoh=GBV+claims+22+lives+in+3+months&yiphi=4244&bvhdgsj=News

 

eSwatini marks Day of the African Child with WASH progress

Statement, Deputy Prime Minister’s Office, eSwatini, 16 June 2026

SOURCE 

The Government of Eswatini has made significant strides in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH), providing access to basic water services to 80% of the population, while 58% now have access to basic sanitation.

The Deputy Prime Minister Thulisile Dladla revealed these achievements during her address to the media in commemoration of the Day of the African Child, held under the theme: “Ensuring Universal Access to Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Every Child in Eswatini.”

“From 2024 to date, we have constructed at least 300 houses with decent toilets and 5000-litre water tanks for child-headed homesteads and vulnerable families under the government’s decent shelter programme. Coordination of WASH programmes across communities, schools, and health facilities has also improved to ensure children have services where they need them most,” said the DPM.

Despite progress, challenges remain. In rural areas, 11% of households still practice open defecation, and poor handwashing practices persist. Inadequate sanitation facilities continue to pose serious health risks, particularly for children under five who are most vulnerable to waterborne diseases. Facilities suitable for children with disabilities are also lacking, while child-headed households and those in remote chiefdoms bear the heaviest burden of WASH deprivation.

The DPM emphasized that the theme aims to accelerate progress toward universal access to safe water, appropriate sanitation, and hygiene for children in Eswatini. It also contributes to achieving Sustainable Development Goal 6 — ensuring the availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all by 2030. This includes improving water quality, increasing water-use efficiency, and protecting water-related ecosystems.

“As the Government we reaffirm our unwavering commitment to the well-being and holistic development of every child. Achieving universal WASH requires government, communities, and partners to work together. We are therefore accelerating multi-sectoral efforts to improve WASH access as part of our broader mandate on community development," the DPM said.

 

King Mswati selling one of his private jets for over R40million as Government confirms in Parliament plans to purchase another plane

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 15 June 2026

SOURCE

MBABANE: King Mswati is allegedly selling one of his private jets for over R40million but, struggling to secure interested buyers.

The King owns two (2) private jets and the other one, has been listed in aircraft sales online platforms for sometime now, King’s Office Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Chief Mgwagwa Gamedze was mentioned as the contact person.

Reached for comments by this Swaziland News, King Mswati’s Spokesperson Percy Simelane said he was not aware of the notice of sale, he then referred comments to King’s Office Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Chief Mgwagwa Gamedze.

“I am not aware. The Chief Officer, Mr Mgwagwa Gamedze should be able to assist as he is alleged to be the face of the sale in question”, said the King’s Spokesperson.

But efforts by this publication to reach the King’s Office CEO proved unsuccessful at the time of compiling this report.

On another note, a Government insider told this publication that, the sale was first facilitated by the Ministry of Public Works and Transport, it remains unclear if a buyer has been secured but, the Ministry of Public Works recently told Parliament that, “Government is planning to buy another jet”.

King Mswati III

No ILO Special Paragraph threats against eSwatini

By Mfanukhona Nkambule, Times of eSwatini, 12 June 2026

SOURCE 

MBABANE: It is a notable shift in the longstanding industrial relations narrative of the Kingdom of Eswatini that, as the International Labour Conference convenes in 2026, the nation is not subject to the intense scrutiny of a Special Paragraph.

An ILO Special Paragraph is a highly publicised mechanism used by ILO.

It serves as a tool of "naming and shaming" within the ILO's supervisory system, specifically deployed when a member country commits continuous, systematic or mass violations of ratified ILO Conventions

This development marks a significant departure from previous decades, particularly the turbulent era under the leadership of the late Jan Sithole of the Swaziland Federation of Trade Unions (SFTU), and even the more recent challenges faced during the tenure of current Secretary General Mduduzi Gina.

In an interview last night, Gina and Minister for Labour and Social Security Phila Buthelezi said there was not much about Eswatini in this year’s annual ILO conference in Geneva, Switzerland.

“We are attending the conference without anything particular to Eswatini,” Gina said.

The minister said: “There’s nothing much about the Kingdom, besides updating committees through reports on progress made regarding issues discussed before.”

While the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) and the Trade Union Congress of Swaziland (TUCOSWA) have submitted observations, the overall disposition of the Committee of Experts indicates a government that is increasingly engaging with technical assistance and procedural mechanisms to address long-standing labour disputes.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.times.co.sz/news/readmore.php?bhsadjgfoh=No+ILO+Special+Paragraph+Threats+Against+Eswatini&yiphi=4186&bvhdgsj=News

 

UN pres­ence in eSwat­ini not shrink­ing – Wachira

By Musa Simelane, Sunday Observer (eSwatini) 14 June 2026

SOURCE 

UN Res­id­ent Coordin­ator in Eswat­ini, George Wachira, has dis­missed per­cep­tions that the United Nations is scal­ing down or with­draw­ing from the king­dom.

Instead, he said its pres­ence is being strengthened under a restruc­tured oper­at­ing model.

He poin­ted to the con­clu­sion of the 2021–2025 UN Cooper­a­tion Frame­work in Decem­ber 2025, not­ing that 17 UN agen­cies had been imple­ment­ing the frame­work over the pre­vi­ous five years.

“For the 2021 to 2025 cycle, we had 17 agen­cies sign­ing the agree­ment to imple­ment it, while the newly launched frame­work now includes 21 agen­cies, an increase of four,” said Wachira.

“So that is the true story; it is not that the United Nation’s pres­ence is redu­cing or with­draw­ing, but rather it depends on where each entity is loc­ated while still cov­er­ing Eswat­ini.”

He explained that glob­ally, some UN agen­cies are relo­cat­ing from expens­ive duty sta­tions such as New York, to more cost-effi­cient loc­a­tions closer to the regions they serve.

This shift has also led to the estab­lish­ment of multi-coun­try offices, where a single rep­res­ent­at­ive may cover sev­eral coun­tries within a region.

For example, UNFPA has its accred­ited rep­res­ent­at­ive based in Pre­toria, South Africa, cov­er­ing Eswat­ini, Leso­tho, and Bot­swana under one arrange­ment.

While the rep­res­ent­at­ive is based in another coun­try, he said staff mem­bers remain in Eswat­ini and con­tinue to imple­ment pro­grammes loc­ally.

“What changes is where the rep­res­ent­at­ive is loc­ated and how many coun­tries they cover as one rep­res­ent­at­ive,” he said.

Wachira stressed that the UN is not with­draw­ing from Eswat­ini. “It is not like the United Nations is walk­ing away. In fact, it will not walk away, but what is chan­ging is the mode of organ­isa­tion and ofcourse, as a way of redu­cing oper­a­tional costs,” he said.

He explained that in some cases, rather than hav­ing a rep­res­ent­at­ive in every coun­try, the UN appoints one rep­res­ent­at­ive to cover mul­tiple coun­tries while staff remains on the ground.

However, he con­firmed that Eswat­ini will con­tinue to host the UN res­id­ent coordin­ator office to ensure national coordin­a­tion of UN activ­it­ies. Wachira also acknow­ledged that staff­ing levels could fluc­tu­ate depend­ing on fund­ing avail­ab­il­ity.

“Of course, as you know, resources dimin­ish, we have had instances where staff was downs­ized because some pro­grammes they were imple­ment­ing were not fun­ded any­more,” he said.

“So at that point, the staff would have to leave and as soon as new projects open, there is like­li­hood of those staff mem­bers being called back.”

Asked to name a UN agency loc­ally that had under­gone such a situ­ation, he poin­ted out the United Nations Chil­dren’s Fund (UNICEF), not­ing that a spe­cific project had ended and led to reduced staff­ing, though he could not recall the project name.

“But UNICEF remains in the King­dom of Eswat­ini. No entity has actu­ally left. Instead, we have more entit­ies that are imple­ment­ing the new cooper­a­tion frame­work,” he said.

He fur­ther noted that under the new arrange­ment, agen­cies such as UNFPA, whose rep­res­ent­at­ive is based in Pre­toria, and UNICEF, which also has its coun­try rep­res­ent­at­ive based in South Africa, will con­tinue to sup­port Eswat­ini.

Wachira emphas­ised that these changes reflect broader UN reforms aimed at improv­ing effi­ciency, coordin­a­tion, and impact in deliv­er­ing sus­tain­able devel­op­ment goals, rather than a reduc­tion in pres­ence.

He reit­er­ated that des­pite struc­tural adjust­ments, the UN’s com­mit­ment to Eswat­ini remained unchanged and its devel­op­ment part­ner­ship with gov­ern­ment con­tin­ued to guide all pro­grammes.

Over­all, he said the changes should not be inter­preted as with­drawal, but as an evol­u­tion in how the UN oper­ates to bet­ter serve coun­tries in the region

  

SWAZI MEDIA COMMENTARY

Find us:

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

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

 

Friday, 12 June 2026

Swaziland Newsletter No. 930 – 12 June 2026

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 930 – 12 June 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.

E10 item sold to govt for E1500 as auditor-general exposes tender abuse

By Mbongeni Ndlela, Eswatini Positive News, 11 June 2026

SOURCE 

LOBAMBA: A shocking revelation that products worth as little as E10 were allegedly sold to Government for as much as E1500 has triggered fresh concerns over the management of public funds, with the Auditor-General warning that millions of Emalangeni continue to disappear through weaknesses in the country's procurement system.

The alarming disclosure was made by Auditor-General Timothy Matsebula during a Public Accounts Committee (PAC) sitting with the Ministry of Finance on Wednesday, where lawmakers launched a scathing attack on procurement practices they believe are bleeding taxpayers dry.

Matsebula told Members of Parliament that Government continues to lose substantial amounts of money through emergency procurement processes, which are increasingly being used to purchase goods and services at highly inflated prices.

In one of the most startling examples presented before the committee, he revealed that products valued at around E10 had, in some instances, been procured by Government for up to E1500 through emergency orders.

The revelation left legislators questioning whether emergency procurement is being abused at the expense of taxpayers.

“There is no value for money. Millions are being lost through tendering processes,” Matsebula told the committee.

The Auditor-General warned that despite laws designed to ensure fairness, transparency and accountability in public procurement, Government continues to face serious challenges that result in excessive spending and poor value for money.

The issue sparked heated debate among PAC members, who argued that the procurement system appears unable to prevent wasteful expenditure.

Deputy Speaker Madala Mhlanga said the E10-to-E1500 example was evidence of deeper problems within the country's tendering framework. He questioned how such transactions could pass through procurement structures without raising red flags.

Mhlanga further recalled concerns surrounding a controversial E263 million digitalisation tender that came before Parliament during the 11th Parliament. He alleged that the company awarded the contract did not possess a valid tax clearance certificate, was not registered as a taxpayer and allegedly lacked a valid trading licence when the tender process closed.

“There is something wrong in the Tender Board. Millions and millions of taxpayers' money are being lost,” said Mhlanga.

PAC member Hon. Tsembeni Magongo also expressed frustration over what she described as a recurring pattern where Government continues awarding emergency contracts to suppliers who have previously failed to deliver.

Public Accounts Committee


To read more of this report, click here

https://www.facebook.com/eswatinipositivenews/posts/pfbid01HWVEiDB2mn4WbZcZto7Rjr5dPqqSdrjxWN3So1upidBNvtijT3S9Z14uzwWwMkYl

 

Police tortured suspect to get confession – Judge

By Sibusiso Tsabedze, eSwatini Observer, 8 June 2026

SOURCE 

The High Court has found two police officers responsible for torturing a Lubombo mechanic who was accused of stealing tractor parts from his former employer.

This was contained in a judgment delivered by Justice Sabelo Masuku who ruled that Sandile William Hlongwane was unlawfully arrested, detained, assaulted and tortured by police officers investigating a theft complaint that later unravelled when the allegedly stolen tractor parts were found at the complainant’s own workshop.

Hlongwane had instituted action against the National Commissioner of Police and Eswatini Government for civil damages in the sum of E2 million.

Court records revealed that he was tied to a bench, handcuffed beneath it and suffocated with a plastic bag by police officers who were trying to force a confession.

The court declared Hlongwane’s arrest and detention unlawful and found that Detective Constable Siyabonga Shiba and Constable Dumsani Tsabedze assaulted and tortured him while acting within the course and scope of their employment with the Royal Eswatini Police Service.

Justice Masuku further ruled that Hlongwane was entitled to claim damages for unlawful arrest, detention, assault and torture, with the amount to be determined during a future hearing.

The judgment stems from events of August 15 and 16, 2020 when Hlongwane, a mechanic who had worked for Moneni businessman Cedric Ngwenya since 2014, was summoned to Manzini Police Station over allegations that he had stolen tractor parts from Ngwenya’s workshop.

According to evidence accepted by the court, Hlongwane reported to the station after receiving a call from Detective Shiba.

Upon arrival, he was questioned by Shiba and Tsabedze about tractor parts allegedly stolen from Ngwenya. Hlongwane denied stealing anything and repeatedly asked police to produce a list of the parts he was accused of taking.

The officers allegedly refused and insisted that he already knew what he had stolen. The court heard that matters quickly escalated.

Hlongwane testified that Tsabedze slapped him and threatened him with further violence unless he confessed. He told the court that officers then showed him a wooden bench they called a “donkey”, forced him to lie on it facing upwards, tied his body and legs to the bench with ropes and handcuffed his hands beneath it. A plastic bag was then pulled over his head and mouth, making it difficult for him to breathe.

He said the officers left him in the interrogation room and instructed him to strike the bench with his handcuffs when he was ready to reveal where the parts were.

Desperate to end the ordeal, Hlongwane said he eventually asked to call his family and tell them to surrender tractor parts kept at his home even though they belonged to customers and family members.

He testified that the torture continued until a female police officer entered the room and questioned why he was being treated that way when there were no exhibits linking him to the alleged crime.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.eswatiniobserver.com/police-tortured-suspect-to-get-confession-judge/

 

Minister appoints ‘terrorist group member’

By Mfanukhona Nkambule, Times Sunday, 7 June 2026

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Did Minister for Public Works and Transport Chief Ndlaluhlaza Ndwandwe breach the Suppression of Terrorism Act of 2008?

This follows the minister’s appointment of a member of an organisation that was specified as a terrorist entity to the Eswatini Road Safety Council. It has been observed that the appointment of Nontsetselelo Nkambule, the Treasurer General of the proscribed Swaziland Youth Congress (SWAYOCO) has sparked significant legal and political controversy.

Adding fuel to fire is the recent police statement seeking public assistance in locating Nkambule to help the law enforcers in determining the authenticity of a reported kidnapping and attempted murder case.   The appointment, which was announced on November 25, 2025, is understood to be a direct violation of the Suppression of Terrorism Act, 2008.

This is understood to be raising serious questions about the alignment between government’s administrative actions and its national security legislation.

While the minister announced the Board with the intention of ushering in a renewed mandate for the 2025–2028 term, a closer examination of Nkambule’s profile reveals a conflict with the country’s laws. She serves as the treasurer general of SWAYOCO, the youth wing of the People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO).

In its profile, SWAYOCO describes itself as a militant wing of PUDEMO.

It must be said that both organisations and two others were proscribed as terrorist entities by the Eswatini Government, a pronouncement originally made by the late Prime Minister Sibusiso Barnabas Dlamini.

To read more of this report click here

https://times.co.sz/news/readmore.php?bhsadjgfoh=Minister+appoints+terrorist+group+member&yiphi=4114&bvhdgsj=News

 

Ten Cabinet Ministers constitutionally not eligible for re-appointment

By Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, June 8, 2026

SOURCE 

MBABANE: Princess Lindiwe, the Minister of Home Affairs and nine (9) other Cabinet Ministers are constitutionally not eligible for re-appointment in the 2028-2033 Government term.

Constitutionally, the King cannot appoint Parliamentarians as Cabinet Ministers for two (2) consecutive terms, other Ministers who are not eligible include Finance Minister Neal Rijikernberg, Economic Planning and Development Minister Dr. Thambo Gina, Commerce Minister Mancoba Khumalo, Public Service Minister Mabulala Maseko, Justice Minister Prince Simelane, Labour Minister Phila Buthelezi, Public Works and Transport Minister Chief Ndlaluhlaza Ndwandwe, Foreign Affairs Minister Pholile Dlamini-Shakantu and Deputy Prime Minister (DPM) Thulisile Dladla.

Acting Government Spokesperson Thabile Mdluli was not immediately available for a comment.

Reached for comments by this Swaziland News on Monday evening, lawyer Sibusiso Nhlabatsi confirmed that, constitutionally, Cabinet Ministers cannot serve for two (2) consecutive terms.

“It’s Section 68 (6) of the Constitution, some Ministers have served for two consecutive terms and therefore, will not come back in 2028”, said the lawyer when asked to interpret the Constitution.

Education and Training Minister Owen Nxumalo who served as the Minister of Public Service during the 2013-2018 term is eligible for re-appointment, he was not a Parliamentarian during the 2018-2023 term and therefore, was not in Cabinet for two (2) consecutive terms.

It has been disclosed that, some Cabinet Ministers who are not eligible for re-appointment have embarked on massive looting of public funds so that they could leave with “Ingcamu” in the event life “forces them to take a long journey to the political wilderness”.

Home Affairs Minister Princess Lindiwe and her JC religious alleged corrupt cartel, was exposed by this publication for allegedly stealing about R100million through African Drums Events Management (Pty) Ltd, this was during the recently held King Mswati’s forty (40) years on the Throne and birthday double celebration.

 

Ousted by the Trump Administration, U.S. immigrants remain locked up in African kingdom

By Kate Morrissey, Capital & Main (U.S.), 9 June 2026

SOURCE 

Held indefinitely, immigrants imprisoned in Eswatini lack medical attention, food and clothing, according to complaint.

A military plane carrying five U.S. immigrants took off from Djibouti in July 2025. 

Its destination was Eswatini, a small country nestled on the border between South Africa and Mozambique. Ruled by a king, Eswatini had made a deal with the Trump administration to receive up to 160 people removed from the United States in exchange for $5.1 million.

According to a complaint filed with the African Commission on Human and People’s Rights, the men didn’t know where they were going until the plane had almost landed.

As with the Venezuelan men sent to El Salvador last year by the Trump administration, when the Eswatini-bound flight arrived, the government there placed the new arrivals in a maximum security prison, where most remain today with no way to challenge their detention. Unlike the case for the Venezuelan men in El Salvador, Congress and the media have spent little time looking into the ongoing imprisonment of the men in Eswatini.

But for the family members of the people sent there, the separation has been devastating.

“He’s suffering some major depression there as I suffer silently here,” said the life partner of a Cuban man sent to Eswatini who asked not to be fully identified for fear of retaliation. 

She said she’s working two jobs to take care of their family now that he’s gone. 

When asked about the situation, the Department of Homeland Security, through an unnamed spokesperson, deferred to the State Department regarding the agreement with Eswatini.

“The Trump Administration is utilizing all lawful options to carry out the largest deportation operation in history, just as President Trump promised,” the spokesperson said. “Anyone who has been deported received full due process.”

The Eswatini government and the U.S. State Department did not respond to requests for comment. When the first flight landed in Eswatini, the Trump administration disparaged the men because of their criminal records.

Since July, two more flights have landed in Eswatini, most recently in March, bringing the total number of immigrants removed from the United States and then imprisoned there to 19 people. A couple of them have since been deported to their home countries.

Beatrice Njeri, regional litigator for Africa at Global Strategic Litigation Council and a lawyer representing several of the men in the complaint with the commission, called the conditions the men have been living in inhumane.

“We are seeing African states being complicit to human rights violations committed by the U.S.,” Njeri said.

Eswatini is among at least eight African countries that have received people removed from the U.S. who do not have any ties to the receiving country under agreements with the Trump administration, according to reporting from journalist Gillian Brockell, who tracks Immigration and Customs Enforcement flights. The U.S. government has also made agreements with countries in Asia, Europe and the Western Hemisphere.

A team of lawyers including Njeri is working to combat those removals by filing complaints with regional human rights commissions. 

To read more of this report, click here

https://capitalandmain.com/ousted-by-the-trump-administration-u-s-immigrants-remain-locked-up-in-african-kingdom

 

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