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Showing posts with label Democratic Alliance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democratic Alliance. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

SHOULD SWAZILAND BE COLONISED?

Moneyweb, South Africa

16 August 2011

SOURCE

Should Swaziland be “colonised”?

Gordhan is already half-way towards “colonisation.”

By Stanley Uys

Angry over South Africa’s R2.5 bn bailout of Swaziland? Aghast that King Mswati III (Africa’s last remaining absolute monarch, crowned in 1986 and “looting the state coffers” ever since) now will have an even more “lavish and indulgent lifestyle” for himself and his 12 (approximately) wives?

Join the club – the northern Eurozone one. The northerners themselves are furious over bailouts: Greece and Cyprus, maybe Ireland. Who’s next?

Mswati has an estimated personal fortune of $200 million. SA’s Finance minister Pravin Gordhan (furious, too, that Mswati jumped the gun to announce the bailout, minus the conditions attached by Gordhan), will not confirm that Mswati first asked the IMF in vain for R10m.

Mswati’s critics range across the whole Left-to-Right spectrum. Ill-feeling runs high in SA against Mswati, seen as running his landlocked nation as his personal fiefdom for more than two decades. Swaziland’s pro-democracy activists threaten to march on the Union Buildings in Pretoria, and SA’s trade unions threaten to cross the border. How far will either get?

The Democratic Alliance calls on King Mswati to unban all political parties and release opposition party members and civil society activists who have been detained without trial. Who will hearken to it?

Cosatu, scornful of the “very vague conditions” attached by Gordhan to the bailout, says: "This is not a natural disaster, but one made in Lobamba (the country's traditional and legislative capital) by a few royal elites who have milked the country dry from years of extravagance, corruption, parasitism and poor management.”

King Mswati’s unelected administration has run through his country’s central bank reserves to pay public sector wages. The IMF says the crux is a civil service wage bill that consumes 18% of GDP. Mswati’s government owes at least $180m in unpaid bills. Repayments of the bailout will be via debits recovered from Swaziland's share of the Southern African Customs Union duties (60% of the kingdom’s total state revenue).

Gordhan says: “Swaziland is a sovereign country; we can only go so far.” It is in SA’s interests to have a stable country. “It’s not our place to dictate to them.” “Sovereign country” is the mantra most African states chant - afraid that outside interference in one profligate “sovereign” African country will lead to interference in the next? Sovereignty is the bulwark behind which ex-President Thabo Mbeki and the African Union resisted “interference.”

The DA makes the point that more than 90% of Swazi imports come from SA and SA buys about two-thirds of Swazi exports. Put these and other points together and the Mswati regime emerges as “utterly reliant” on SA’s goodwill. SA, says the DA, “should not miss this opportunity to contribute to the democratisation of our neighbour by using our economic leverage…without delay.”

By asking Swaziland to implement only economic, not political, reforms, Gordhan invites political restiveness among impatient SA trade unionists and in tiny Swaziland’s 1.4m population. The ANC Youth League, frustrated over its recent failed move to overthrow the Botswana government, sees Swaziland as a sitting duck.

When Zimbabwe was in its worst mess, did the thought flit through the ANC’s collective mind (it has one?) that Zimbabwe would soon be up for grabs?

The DA calls for “democratisation,” but wouldn’t “colonisation” be an option? A joint endeavour by say the UN or some other internationally-endorsed foreign institution or think-tank? (forget about the African Union).

Let’s get this straight. Colonialism as Africa has known it, is past its sell-by date. In any case, who would want a colony now, especially a run-down one like Swaziland? But what about a benign consortium, with hard-headed assistance in mind, and international backing?

Already, Gordhan wants a team of South African experts with unlimited access to “assist Swaziland with its fiscal and budgetary plans”; Swaziland to undertake "confidence-building measures" to attract foreign direct investment; to align its fiscal policy to International Monetary Fund standards; and to co-operate with "multilateral engagements" to stabilise Swaziland’s tiny economy. Gordhan is already half-way towards “colonisation.”

Hopefully, the critical political reforms Swaziland needs will arrive when they are propelled there by the momentum of economic change. If not, who would administer Swaziland if it went into political rehab? To judge by King Mswati’s record, politically it should be taken into protective custody or placed under a curator bonis. Its own trade unions, encouraged by Cosatu and other SA unions, could lend support, even if under warning not to rock the financial boat.

The problem is this: If the ANC cannot democratise itself, how can it democratise Swaziland?

Thursday, 4 August 2011

DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE ON SWAZI LOAN

Democratic Alliance, South Africa

Statement

3 August 2011

Democratic Alliance (Cape Town)

Swaziland: Bailout - Grant Should Be Conditional On Democratic Reform

The Democratic Alliance (DA) notes that the South African government has pledged a R2.5 billion rescue grant for Swaziland and will announce the terms of the bailout this afternoon (3 August 2011).

Given the undemocratic nature of the Swaziland regime, we hope that Minister of Finance Pravin Gordhan will use this opportunity to show our government's commitment to human rights, democracy and the rule of law by making the delivery of the grant contingent upon King Mswati III agreeing to undertake serious democratic reforms. The first steps in implementing reform should be the unbanning of all political parties, and the release of opposition party members and civil society activists who have been detained without trial.

Only once these conditions have been met should the South African government proceed with payment of this grant.

Swaziland is the sole remaining absolute monarchy in Africa, right here on our doorstep, and the South African government is uniquely placed to help move Swaziland towards democracy. South Africa is Swaziland's key trading partner, with more than 90% of Swazi imports coming from South Africa. We also buy about two-thirds of the country's exports.

Moreover, Swaziland receives at least 60% of its total state revenue from the Southern African Customs Union (SACU), making the Mswati regime utterly reliant on the goodwill of South Africa. The request for a rescue grant by King Mswati reveals this dependence yet again, thus we should not waste this opportunity to contribute to the democratisation of our neighbour by using our economic leverage.

It is disappointing that South Africa has thus far played such a meagre role in promoting democratic reform or providing humanitarian relief in Africa. We are contributing very little government-initiated relief to the Somalians who face mass starvation, nor are we assisting Kenya and Ethiopia to deal with the Somali refugee crisis. Instead, we are bailing out the least democratic regime on the continent with a very generous funding package.

The DA calls on Minister Pravin Gordhan to assure South Africans that our financial assistance to Swaziland will not be used to sponsor King Mswati's lavish and indulgent lifestyle. Our grant to the Swazi government should go toward improving the lot of the people of Swaziland, who suffer under stifling poverty and political repression.

South Africa's transition to democracy was supported by the African and broader international community, and we should strive to play a similar role in promoting democratic reform in other African countries. We are now in a unique position to leverage for political and socio-economic progress in Swaziland; therefore any loan granted should be conditional on a commitment from King Mswati III to institute democratic reform without delay.

Stevens Mokgalapa, DA Deputy Spokesperson on International Relations and Co-operation

Sunday, 15 August 2010

CALL FOR HUMAN RIGHTS SPREADS

Opposition to the human rights catastrophe in Swaziland is growing in neighbouring South Africa.


The Democratic Alliance (DA) wants the Secretary-General of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Parliamentary Forum, Dr. Esau Chiviya, to convene an urgent meeting to discuss the spate of recent human rights abuses occurring in Swaziland.


Swaziland, ruled by King Mswati III, sub-Saharan Africa’s last absolute monarch, is in the grip of a reign of terror unleashed by the state against pro-democracy activists.


In May 2010 Sipho Jele, an activist for the People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO), died while in custody. Pro-democracy activists fear he was murdered. An inquest into Jele’s death was opened and has now been adjourned indefinitely.


Jele had been arrested for wearing a T-shirt with a PUDEMO logo. Calls from civil society in Swaziland for an independent investigation into his death, have been met with silence by the Swazi government.


This month, the Swazi police arrested a member of the Swaziland Youth Congress (SWAYOCO), Sibusiso Mhlanga, for possessing a copy of a City Press article, that detailed a sex scandal involving the Swazi Royal Family.


All news of the scandal has been suppressed in the Swazi media, but South African newspapers, which also circulate in Swaziland, have carried reports. DA called this, ‘an ominous action amidst allegations against the Swazi authorities of police brutality of activists whilst in detention’.


The DA said in a statement, ‘Both these instances are indicative of a society that lives under an oppressive regime, that of King Mswati III, who denies his citizens what are, in essence, their most basic of human rights.’


The DA wants South African President Jacob Zuma to discuss these ‘very serious human rights violations’ at the SADC Heads of State meeting in Windhoek. ‘The DA believes that it is time for the South African government to demonstrate its leadership in the region and re-affirm our commitment to human rights.’