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Showing posts with label African Union. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African Union. Show all posts

Friday, 13 October 2023

Swaziland Newsletter No. 798 – 13 October 2023

 

Swaziland Newsletter No. 798 – 13 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.

 

‘People want change but fear the guns’: Fighting for democracy in eSwatini

By Sumayya Ismail, Al Zazerra, 9 October 2023

SOURCE 

The first time Maxwell Dlamini was arrested, he was 21 years old.

It was April 2011, and the marketing student was at a demonstration in Mbabane, the capital of Eswatini, formerly known as Swaziland and considered by many to be the last absolute monarchy in Africa.

Dlamini was out campaigning for democratic reforms, but the state saw it another way. They argued he was trying to overthrow the government, classified him as a dangerous political prisoner, and held him in a maximum security prison where he faced months of harassment, solitary confinement, and torture.

“I was kept in isolation for the longest time, not interacting with any other inmates,” Dlamini told Al Jazeera. “I was denied the right to write my exams, so I ended up not finishing and was expelled from university … At some stage, while I was in prison, I also had a stroke.”

Just shy of a year behind bars, an international human rights campaign helped secure bail and his release. But his freedom was short-lived. From 2012 to 2014, he was arrested twice more – once for criticising the king’s lavish birthday party while Swazis live in poverty and once for attending a May Day workers’ rally.

For his actions, he was charged with sedition and “terrorism”, and more than a decade later, his court case is still pending. At the same time, the People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO), which he is deputy secretary general of, remains a banned organisation in a country where political parties are illegal.

Meanwhile, Dlamini is receiving psychosocial support after his ordeal. “I have episodes and flashbacks,” he said. “I still feel like I’m in a box, so I have to sleep with the lights on.”

Eswatini, the small Southern African kingdom of 1.2 million people, has been governed by King Mswati III for 37 years after he took over from his father, who had ruled since the country gained independence from Britain in 1968.

Tensions have been high there in recent years, especially since a crackdown on mass pro-democracy protests in 2021 killed dozens of people, and calls for greater transparency and real democratic reform have grown.

King Mswati III of Eswatini, left, with Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa in Harare, Zimbabwe [File: Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters]

Eswatini considers itself a constitutional monarchy. “We are a kingdom that subscribes to constitutionalism, to the rule of law, to democracy and to all international norms of human rights and good governance,” government spokesperson Alpheous Nxumalo told Al Jazeera.

Bottom of Form

But rights activists and pro-democracy groups said that in practice, it’s an absolute monarchy where the king reigns over all else.

According to the 2022 Freedom in the World report, which tracks global trends in political rights and civil liberties, “The king exercises ultimate authority over all branches of the national government and effectively controls local governance through his influence over traditional chiefs. Political dissent and civic and labor activism are subject to harsh punishment under sedition and other laws.”

In late September, the country held elections to elect 59 members of parliament. Because the Eswatini constitution bans political parties, only individuals can stand for election.

To read more of this report, click here

https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2023/10/9/people-want-change-but-fear-the-guns-fighting-for-democracy-in-eswatini

 

King, Queen Mother gets salary increase to share E431 million

By Eugene Dube, Swati Newsweek, 9 October, 2023

SOURCE 

LOBAMBA: The budget for Eswatini Royal family is over E991 million for 2023 financial year and King Mswati III and his mother Ntombi Tfwala have received a wage increase.

Eswatini’s new investigative media outlet, Inhlase Centre for investigative Journalism exposed the huge financial issue.

According to a news report from Inhlase Centre for investigative Journalism, the royal budget includes an allocation for wages for the king, Indlovukazi, the rest of the royal household and payments to any other person as the king may decide.

This year, Rijkenberg’s budget has made a generous allocation for royal provisions. He has set aside a budget allocation of E431 million for the Royal Emoluments and Civil List.

This allocation represents an increase of E20 million from E411 million in the 2021/22 and 2022/23 financial year.

Rijkenberg’s overall budget of E1.038 billion, recurrent and capital, for King Mswati and the royal household represents about 3.8% of the total national budget of E26 billion.

Last year 2022 financial year the Royal family recieved E1, billion for its upkeep. E411 was set aside for the King and Queenmother's salaries.

Information about the King’s salary is always ignored by the Swazi mainstream media.

Inhlase Centre for Invesigative Journalism noted that, "as ordinary emaSwati battle the realities of high inflation, mounting national debt and unemployment, government says things are looking up and has given the king and the royal household a bigger chunk of the budget, three times bigger than the country’s financially strapped national university will get."

Government has made as subvention a budget provision of E446 million for the University of Eswatini which was closed for almost two months because of a strike by staff including lecturers over salaries.

This is a drop in the ocean for the kingdom’s national university which is laden with a wage bill of over E40 million a month. The subvention is not even half of what it had requested; E1billion for a smooth running of its operations.

 

Swaziland Election Round-Up

 

eSwatini conducts a competent caricature of democracy

The elections were quite well run, say the African Union and SADC. But to what end?

By Peter Fabricius, ISS (Institute for Security Studies) Today, 6 October 2023

SOURCE    

Eswatini – or Swaziland as some of its citizens still call it – held last Friday what should be called a reasonably competent charade of a legislative election.

The polls were essentially meaningless as Parliament has no power in this absolute monarchy. That was demonstrated two years ago when the state arrested two Members of Parliament (MPs) merely for suggesting the prime minister be elected by Parliament and not appointed by King Mswati III. The two MPs are serving jail sentences while a third is in exile, having fled the country one jump ahead of the police.

But as charades go, it went quite well, according to both the African Union and the Southern African Development Community (SADC), the two organisations that deployed the main official election observer missions. Their preliminary reports make for interesting, if rather surreal reading. Both commended Swazis for turning out in large numbers and voting in a peaceful and orderly fashion.

They also praised Eswatini’s Elections and Boundaries Commission (EBC) for running the process quite competently. Most polling stations opened on time, voting procedures were largely followed, etc. The SADC Electoral Observer Mission (SEOM) also commended the electoral commission for its successful voter registration drive, which registered 584 710 voters, equating to a ‘remarkable 91.2%’ of the 641 121 eligible voters identified in the 2018 National Census.

The SEOM also noted that ‘in an effort to be more inclusive,’ the electoral commission targeted marginalised groups in its voter education. This was to ‘encourage meaningful participation and representation’ to achieve greater ‘democratic consolidation’ in line with SADC’s Principles and Guidelines for elections.

The elections were essentially meaningless as Parliament has no power in this absolute monarchy

As Piers Pigou, Head of the Southern Africa Programme at the Institute for Security Studies (ISS), points out, these complimentary observations that suggest complete normality were rather bizarre. Especially as they were so at odds with other remarks in the SEOM report – not to mention with reality.

These other remarks point out that Eswatini’s government hasn’t implemented the SEOM’s main recommendation after the 2018 elections that it should conduct a ‘peaceful and tolerant’ dialogue about the country’s political system focusing on ‘the recognition of the role of political parties.’

For despite the constitution’s recognition of the rights of assembly and expression, political parties remain banned from participating in elections. So once again, on 29 September, candidates for Parliament stood as individuals in the country’s traditional tinkhundla system, which gives enormous powers to chiefs, who in turn are answerable to the king.

The 2023 SEOM also said that after Eswatini’s violent June 2021 pro-democracy protests and riots, in which scores were killed and much infrastructure destroyed, SADC noted that ‘the issues behind the disturbances were political, structural or systemic in nature, with the tinkhundla system at the centre.’ The SEOM reiterated its 2018 calls and SADC’s appeal for Eswatini to embark on a national dialogue to replace its current political system.

Eswatini hasn’t implemented SADC’s main recommendation after the 2018 elections

Pigou said the ‘dissonance between the two elements of the SEOM report is remarkable. It raises the question of why SADC decided to participate at all in a process that was so compromised.’ Pigou said he understood that the SADC Electoral Advisory Council had in fact recommended against sending an observer mission to Eswatini, but had been overruled by SADC’s Council of Ministers.

Probably for this reason too, the Commonwealth Secretariat, despite being involved in past efforts to resolve the country’s conflict, did not send an official observer mission. It did however deploy some election experts to report back to London on developments.

To read more of this report, click here

https://issafrica.org/iss-today/eswatini-conducts-a-competent-caricature-of-democracy

 

Parties urged members to stand in ‘farce’ Swazi elections

By Sizwe Sama Yende, City Press (South Africa), 8 October 2023

SOURCE 

Some political parties in Eswatini have allowed their members to individually campaign and stand for positions in a strategy to canvass for democratic reforms.

The landlocked country and Africa’s only absolute monarchy held its secondary elections, described by the African Union (AU) as peaceful, on September 29.

Sive Siyinqaba and Swaziland Liberation Movement (Swalimo), a party formed by former Member of Parliament, Mduduzi “Magawugawu” Simelane, had agreed to allow their members to participate in the elections to occupy positions as Members of Parliament, Indvuna Yenkhundla (Constituency Headsman) and 336 Bucopho (Community Headsman).

Sive Siyinqaba has claimed that 70% of its members won seats. However, the oldest and biggest political party in the kingdom, the People’s United Democratic Movement (Pudemo), labelled the elections a “farce” and did not encourage its members to participate.

Political parties were banned by the late King Sobhuza in 1973 and cannot contest elections. The country adopted a Tinkhundla system, which allows individuals to stand and be voted in positions but not under the banner of political parties. However, the AU’s observer mission has made a recommendation to the government to review its legal framework to embrace the participation of political parties in elections.

The elections were conducted against the backdrop of pro-democracy protests in July 2021, which have since shone the spotlight on the monarch, King Mswati III, to sit around the table with all organisations to chart a way forward for the country – towards a democratic system.

The Southern African Development Community proposed a dialogue, but King Mswati III prefers his isibaya (byre) meeting which happens occasionally and where issues are supposed to be raised.

The violent protests erupted after three members of parliament - Bacede Mabuza, Mthandeni Dube and Simelane – publicly advocated for democratic reforms and protested the king’s appointment of then-acting prime minister, Themba Masuku, whom they said should have been elected by voters.

Mabuza and Dube have since been found guilty of terrorism, sedition and murder. Simelane went into exile and formed Swalimo.

King Mswati reacted with brutality. His police and soldiers conducted a reign of terror and torture that led to the maiming and killing of more than 1 000 civilians.

Among the casualties were human rights lawyer, Thulani Maseko, who was assassinated at his home in January.

Mswati has since allegedly hired apartheid-era mercenaries to silence dissent in the country.

Swalimo spokesperson, Thantaza Silolo, said that the organisation did not participate in the elections but urged all citizens to register to vote with the purpose of electing a certain kind of MP – who would emulate the trio who sparked the protests.

“Those MPs provoked the hope of the nation to see that their representatives can actually bring the positives inside the legislature as far as the call for reforms is concerned.”

“Indeed, the system is a farce,” he added, “but with representatives who are pro-change, you are able to make inroads. Swalimo, being a mass-based movement, had many of its members and supporters participating indeed and many made it, which resulted in most of the pro-regime contestants – who are from the old Parliament – being booted out of the race early in the primaries and some in the secondary elections.

“I can mention that we do not have large numbers, of course, but we are happy with the inroads.”

Pudemo president, Mlungisi Makhanya, said that his organisation respected other parties’ decision to allow their members to participate in the elections.

“The majority of organisations in the Mass Democratic Movement resolved not to associate themselves with the farce called Tinkhundla elections,” Makhanya said.

He added: “Pudemo members in their overwhelming majority didn’t partake in the Tinkhundla elections. However, there were a few delinquents who went against the resolution of the organisation and stood for elections. It was few and isolated cases.”

Eswatini government spokesperson Alpheous Nxumalo said that the government was “quite comfortable” with the recommendations by the AU and various observatory missions.

“The Elections and Boundaries Commission in collaboration with the ministry of justice and constitutional affairs shall work on the recommendations and do whatever that is necessary within the provisions of the Kingdom’s national Constitution,” he said.

Strangely, he said that political parties were not banned in the country. “They operate and meet freely, and their respective members have contested the recently concluded elections.” King Mswati III has announced the 10 MPs as he has the power to handpick. Among them is his son, Prince Lindani.

 

Calls for an elected Prime Minister (PM) without unbanning of political parties a mockery of democracy, elected Speaker serves King Mswati

Opinion, by Zweli Martin Dlamini, Swaziland News, 11 October, 2023

SOURCE 

Even if King Mswati agreed to allow emaSwati to elect their own Prime Minister (PM), the calls for democracy wouldn’t be over until political parties are allowed to freely participate or contest elections.

The calls for an elected Prime Minister that commenced in Parliament was in fact, a mockery of democracy that was, however, worth compromising to allow the citizens oppressed for over fifty (50) years to gradually understand and transform into a new democratic dispensation.

In this country, the Speaker is not appointed by the King but elected by the House of Assembly and this, I would suggest, is just a drop of democracy in an ocean of dictatorship.

As a result, that drop of democracy cannot breath in a political system established and grounded on dictatorship values, where King Mswati’s word automatically becomes the law.

It should be noted that, most elected MPs who previously held this position were elected by the people but, what they did once they arrived in Parliament is public knowledge, they submitted to the authority of the King.

Therefore, electing a Prime Minister under the Tinkhundla system would be reforming this cruel and oppressive system because that Head of Government, will not serve the interest of the masses but the King and the stomachs of those who claim they can democratize Tinkhundla.

The Tinkhundla system of governance will never be democratic but, like a chameleon, it has been changing ‘colours’ over years to appear as democratic in the eyes of the people and the international community.

It is therefore important to state that, democracy is not about individuals or electing a Prime Minister but the establishment of democratic institutions that enhance accountability of public power.

Former Speaker Petros Mavimbela was elected by the people of Mhlambanyatsi but when he arrived in Parliament, he protected the interests of King Mswati, an absolute Monarch by blocking critical motions of vital public interest.

The calls for democracy should not be compromised by short-term political interests, the process of democratizing this country include unbanning of political parties, establishing of an independent judiciary and capacitating the civil society and the media among others, to be more vibrant and hold those in power accountable.

Furthermore, the process include the establishment of a democratic Parliament and a democratic and independent Legislature can only be a product of democratic elections.

The Executive Arm of Government should also be a product of democratic elections that reflects the will of the people.

 

 

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Thursday, 4 February 2021

Slow roll out of coronavirus vaccines in Swaziland, health workers to get priority

Only 3 percent of the Swaziland (eSwatini) population are likely to get coronavirus vaccines in the first phase of inoculations, according to the kingdom’s Minister of Health Lizzie Nkosi.

In a statement she said no firm date for the arrival of the first vaccines had been given but she hoped it would be before the end of February 2021.

There are about 1.2 million people in Swaziland.

Nkosi said frontline healthcare workers would be the first to get the vaccine. It had previously been reported in local media that Swazi politicians would be given first priority.

Phase two would see the elderly aged 60 years and above and people living with pre-existing illnesses. Phase three would be other essential workers outside of the health service, including security forces and teachers.

She said the government had formed several committees to distribute the coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine and that the AstraZeneca / Oxford University vaccine was its preferred choice, but other vaccines could be imported.

Nkosi said about 108,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine were expected in the Kingdom by the end of February. Since two doses are needed that would be enough to only vaccinate 54,000 people.

However, Nkosi said Swaziland would eventually receive more than 230,000 doses through the African Union. The Swazi Government was also looking for ways to obtain vaccines independently.

As of Wednesday (3 February 2021) 15,974 people had tested positive for coronavirus and 585 had died, according to the Ministry of Health.

 

See also

Swaziland hospitals short of body bags as coronavirus deaths rise

https://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2021/02/swaziland-hospitals-short-of-body-bags.html

 

Swaziland paramedics stop work on coronavirus response, say they need more protection https://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2021/02/swaziland-paramedics-stop-work-on.html

 

UK emergency team sent to Swaziland as coronavirus deaths continue to rise https://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2021/02/uk-emergency-team-sent-to-swaziland-as.html

Wednesday, 9 October 2019

Broke Swaziland Govt wants to borrow another E1bn to complete unnecessary convention centre

The Government of Swaziland / eSwatini is to seek another E1.2 billion (US$83 million) in loans to complete the building of a conference centre and hotel to house an African Union summit that will not now take place.

Costs of the building under construction at Ezulwini have already exceeded E1bn and are estimated to be a further E2bn over the next three years.

The International Convention Centre and five star hotel project known as ICC-FISH was started because Swaziland hoped to house an African Union summit in 2020. But it has not won the contract for this.

The Government of Swaziland, which was not elected by handpicked by absolute monarch King Mswati III, tabled a ‘certificate of urgency’ on Monday (7 October 2019) to pass a bill to allow it to borrow US$83 million (about E1.2bn) from the Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan).

The Times of eSwatini reported there was controversy in the House of Assembly when the bill was sent to be discussed by committee as it was not clear if a majority of members present voted in its favour.

The Eswatini News (formerly Swazi News) reported last week that costs of ICC-FISH had already reached E1.027bn and this had been financed mainly by Taiwan. Bathroom fittings alone at the hotel cost E78m.

Swaziland’s economy is in meltdown and public services in health and education are grinding to a halt. However in March 2018 the government declared the building of ICC-FISH to be a priority and earmarked E1.5bn for it in the national budget. This was more than the sum allocated to the Ministry of Agriculture (E1.4bn) or the Ministry of Defence (E1.15bn). It was the biggest single capital project in Swaziland’s budget that year. Total capital spending was set at E5.6bn.

The hotel and conference centre is another project supported by the King Mswati III. He believes such buildings add to the prestige of his kingdom and will make it a First World nation by 2022. He already has an airport named in his honour that cost an estimated E2.5bn to build but only has one airline using it. King Mswati III International Airport has been described as a ‘white elephant’ and a ‘vanity project’ for the King.

In 2013 when the plan for the development of ICC-FISH was announced the cost was estimated at E1bn. Completion of the work was expected by 2016.

In September 2017 it was reported that King Mswati had visited Las Vegas in the United States to try to get the Caesars Palace company (famous for its hotel and casino) to manage the ICC-FISH. ‘The King’s Office Correspondent’, writing at the time in the Swazi Observer, a newspaper in effect owned by the King, reported Caesars Palace management had promised to submit a proposal on what it would cost to manage the ICC and hotel. 

In 2013, when the plan for building was announced the Swazi Observer reported, ‘The scope of the project include a facility of international standards with a Swazi theme, a facility to handle up to 4,500 delegates at a time, trade centre for high value exhibition, a secure chamber room to take 53 heads of state, 3,500 seat banqueting hall, restaurants, 1,500 seat theatre, and special holding rooms.’

ICC-FISH was intended to house the African Union (AU) summit which is held twice a year and lasts about eight days.


In February 2019 it was announced Swaziland had missed out to South Africa on the chance to host the 2020 AU summit. Media in South Africa said this was because Swaziland did not have the resources to fulfil the role.

It is no secret that Swaziland is broke. Hospitals have run out of vital drugs and schools have been forced to close because the government has not paid its suppliers. In his budget speech in March 2018 Finance Minister Martin Dlamini said government owed E3.1bn (US$230 million) in total to its suppliers for goods and services. 

In 2016, when King Mswati was Chair of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) he took about E40m, mostly from public funds, to host a lavish Heads of State summit at a time when his government was so poor it could release only E22m of the E305m earmarked for drought relief in that year’s national budget. 

When he formally opened the Swaziland Parliament on 8 February 2019, King Mswati demanded severe public spending cuts for the coming year. He said the kingdom’s spending had ‘surpassed sustainable levels’ and government debts were increasing. The kingdom’s financial reserves were falling and there was little economic growth. He warned that taxes collected in Swaziland would not be enough to pay the bills.

See also

King’s deal with $18bn bankrupt
Swaziland Govt’s investment ‘fantasy’
https://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2013/10/swaziland-govts-investment-fantasy.html

Thursday, 21 February 2019

Swaziland’s absolute king misses out on AU Chair because his kingdom is broke


King Mswati III, the autocratic ruler of Swaziland / eSwatini, has lost the chance to be chair of the African Union in 2020 because his kingdom is broke.

The honour will now go to the head of state of South Africa, who is presently Cyril Ramaphosa.
King Mswati had been expected to take the chair of the AU Commission which changes each year, but at its heads of state summit in Addis Ababa earlier in February 2019 the decision was made to make the change.

Media in South Africa reported Swaziland missed out on the chair because it did not have the resources to fulfil the role. 

The AU is an organisation that promotes unity and solidarity among African states.

City Press in South Africa reported officials ‘made a desperate plea to South Africa’ to take over the chair.

It added, ‘They cited “capacity constraints” as the reason eSwatini could not fulfil this duty, according to government officials with knowledge of the meeting.’

The Daily Maverick reported,There was talk initially that it was eSwatini’s turn to lead. Officials, however, said the monarchy – which is heavily in debt – complained about “capacity constraints”. The officials didn’t clarify the meaning of this, but it seems to be about money.’

Swaziland is still expected to host the AU mid-year summit. However, following reforms mid-year summits have been downgraded to ‘gatherings’. 

Even if Swaziland does host the mid-year meeting, South Africa is reportedly expected to meet most of the expenses, the Daily Maverick reported an official saying.

This was, ‘because it would have to provide security and logistics,’ the official said.

Swaziland does not have the military, the cars or drivers to transport all the important people who would be attending, it was reported.

It is no secret that Swaziland is broke. Hospitals have run out of vital drugs and schools have been forced to close because the government has not paid its suppliers. In his budget speech in March 2018 Finance Minister Martin Dlamini said government owed E3.1bn (US$230 million) in total to its suppliers for goods and services. 

Even with these debts, the government, which is not elected but handpicked by King Mswati, allocated E1.5 billion for a conference centre and five-star hotel to house the AU summit. This was more than the sum allocated to the Ministry of Agriculture (E1.4bn) or the Ministry of Defence (E1.15bn). It was the biggest single capital project in Swaziland’s budget that year. Total capital spending was set at E5.6bn.

In 2016, when King Mswati was Chair of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) he took about E40m, mostly from public funds, to host a lavish Heads of State summit at a time when his government was so poor it could release only E22 million of the E305 million earmarked for drought relief in that year’s national budget. 

When he formally opened the Swaziland Parliament on 8 February 2019, King Mswati demanded severe public spending cuts for the coming year. He said the kingdom’s spending had ‘surpassed sustainable levels’ and government debts were increasing. The kingdom’s financial reserves were falling and there was little economic growth. He warned that taxes collected in Swaziland would not be enough to pay the bills.

See also

Kingdom fails SADC delegates

Millions ‘wasted’ on luxury vehicles at SADC summit

Absolute king takes chair of SADC

‘Dictator king not fit to chair SADC’