(From Swazi Media Commentary 8 August 2009 www.swazimedia.blogspot.com)



    The Americans
 have stepped up the pressure on Swaziland to pass a law to outlaw human 
trafficking in the kingdom.

  The
Swazis have been given a deadline of mid September to get their house
in order. If they don’t aid worth up to 200 million dollars could be
withdrawn.

  As I reported in June 2009, women
and children in Swaziland are bought and sold for sex, domestic
servitude and forced labour, Swazi boys are trafficked for forced
labour in commercial agriculture and market vending. Some Swazi women
are forced into prostitution in South Africa and Mozambique after
voluntarily travelling to these countries in search of work.

  Despite ample evidence that this was going on the Swazi Government did 
nothing about it, so the United States intervened to force Swaziland’s hand.

    Now Swaziland’s illegally-appointed Prime Minister Barnabas Dlamini has 
announced the
House of Assembly will rush through a new law outlawing human
trafficking, because he fears losing up to 200 million dollars of US
aid.

    We
should be pleased that some attempt is being made to address the issue
of forced labour, but we shouldn’t expect a good job to be down on the
parliamentary bill. The Swazi Parliament is pretty hopeless when it
comes to drafting legislation because often members of parliament don’t
understand what it is that is before them. Just look at the mess they
made last year with the Suppression of Terrorism Act and even today, four years 
after it was enacted, many parliamentarians can’t understand the Swaziland 
Constitution.



  Here’s
a flavour of the new People Trafficking and People Smuggling Bill: if
passed it will be illegal for anyone to promise someone a lucrative job
or marriage and fail to provide such a job whilst the worker is then
far from home. Can someone explain to me what that actually means?

  A sign of what might lay ahead come this week when MPs discussed the proposed 
new law and said it was dangerous to agree to it as it would set a bad 
precedent to have another country tell Swazis what to do.

  Others saw the new law as
an attack on Swazi culture. MP Petros Mavimbela told the House of
Assembly that ‘sometimes we marry people without the need to ask for
their permission as such is the Swazi culture’.

  The
clock is ticking. The Swazi House of Assembly has until 13 September to
meet its deadline. Who would bet on them to make it? 
Link 
http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2009/08/swaziland-rushes-sex-traffic-law.html 






      
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