(From Swazi Media Commentary, 10 September 2010,  www.swazimedia.blogspot.com 
Also
on Face book at 
http://www.facebook.com/Swazi.Media.Commentary?v=wall#!/group.php?gid=142383985790674&ref=ts)






  Barnabas
 Dlamini, Swaziland’s
 illegally-appointed Prime Minister can no 
longer command the respect of the international community.

     His
 latest pronouncement is that dissidents and foreigners who speak out 
against the regime in Swaziland, ruled by King Mswati III,  sub-Saharan 
Africa’s last 
absolute monarch, should be whipped on the soles of their feet.

     Dlamini
 was reacting to the Global
 Day of Action for 
Swaziland democracy which saw protest marches
 in Mbabane and Manzini. Although police and security forces 
harassed and intimidated the pro-democracy campaigners the message got 
out to the world loud and clear: Swaziland has abandoned any pretence 
that it is a democracy and respecter of human rights.

     Dlamini’s
 call for torture is the best that he can do in response to calls for 
freedom. While the world wants statesmanship, he responds like a herd 
boy - the only way he can get people to do what he wants is to whip 
them.  He has shown himself to be incapable of 
discussion and dialogue and now it is clear there is no point in trying 
to engage with him. The international community will see that 
Swaziland’s prime minister is no more than a thug who lacks the 
intellectual capacity to take Swaziland forward. King Mswati keeps 
saying he wants his kingdom to become part of the ‘first
 world’. That is an impossible task with Dlamini as head of 
government.

     Already
 Dlamini, who has a well documented history as an enemy
 of freedom, has been condemned for his latest disregard for the 
rule of law.

     The
 Swaziland Solidarity Network (SSN) said Dlamini has a mandate from King
 Mswati ‘to strangle all opposition from within or outside the country’.

     SSN
 said in a statement,
 ‘It takes an extremely sadistic person to suggest such a painful form 
of torture for innocent human beings who happen to side with their 
fellow human beings on the other side of the fence.’

     Dlamini’s
 call for torture has had the opposite effect to the one he presumably 
intended. Instead of frightening off democracy activists, he has 
strengthened their resolve.

     The
 Swaziland Youth Congress (SWAYOCO), a banned entity in the kingdom, 
said in a statement, ‘no amount of harassment, torture and killing will 
stop us and the international community from calling for democracy and 
sustainable peace in Swaziland’.



     SWAYOCO
 went on to say its members had in the past ‘been tortured, maimed and 
murdered by his corrupt government.



     ‘These
 threats are therefore nothing else but a reaffirmation of his 
government’s stand in dealing with the democratic forces in the 
country.’    

  SWAYOCO went on, ‘while he can have
 his way in torturing and murdering innocent Swazis, the same cannot be 
done to our international friends, particularly those from South 
Africa’.



     SWAYOCO
 has asked the South African government to ‘denounce the statements of 
the Prime Minister’ because they are a direct threat to South African 
citizens.Link 
http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2010/09/swazi-pm-dlamini-loses-respect.html 





      

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