(From Swazi Media Commentary 19 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).






  No matter how much the Swaziland Government wants
 to keep the world in ignorance of the human rights abuses in the 
kingdom, the truth is getting out.

     At
 the start of the recent Global
 Week of Action  for 
democracy in Swaziland, two Associated Press reporters
 were turned away at the border with South Africa. The clear intention 
of the Swazi regime, headed by King Mswati III,  sub-Saharan Africa’s last 
absolute monarch, was to try
 to stop reporting of the protests reaching the international community.

     The
 Swazi regime failed miserably. Over the past two weeks international 
media have been full of reports about Swaziland, exposing the harsh 
regime in the kingdom and the way that the Swazi state tries to stifle 
legitimate protest.



     Here
 is a summary of some of the more interesting articles. Click on the 
media name to go to the full articles. Also, on Friday (17 September 
2010) I posted
 a report from CBC in Canada that is worth a listen if you haven’t 
already done so.       

  The Economist magazine in a report 
headed The king is good for the tourists, much less so for 
his people contrasts the 
image of the  ‘pretty little mountainous kingdom’ 
that is sold to tourists with the reality of  a 
state where ‘political parties are banned, critics are systematically 
arrested and beaten up by police and freedom of expression is severely 
curtailed’.



     It
 says, ‘As wars of liberation raged around it in the 1980s, this former 
British protectorate gained a reputation as an island of peace in a sea 
of regional conflict. And that is the way the government wants to keep 
things, come what may. The prime minister has even threatened to bring 
back the bastinado, a form of torture where a person’s feet are beaten 
with a cane or a rod, to deal with pesky dissidents and interfering 
foreigners. “There is peace,” Mduduzi Gina, head of the Swaziland 
Federation of Trade Unions, concedes, “but it’s not real peace if every 
time there is dissent, you have to suppress it. It’s like sitting on top
 of a boiling pot.”’

     ‘Over
 the past few years the oppression has been getting worse. Yet no 
country seems willing to take up the Swazis’ case. They feel most 
aggrieved about South Africa’s silence. After all, they gave refuge to 
the African National Congress during its liberation struggle. Why can’t 
it return the favour now? Because, it is whispered, South Africa’s 
president, Jacob Zuma, received money from King Mswati during his 
campaign to oust former president Thabo Mbeki. Mr Zuma is also still 
officially engaged to one of the king’s nieces. And South Africa wants 
Swaziland’s support to get itself elected back onto the UN Security 
Council next month.’

     Business Day, South Africa, questions
 why the South African government was silent over the violence meted out
 by Swazi police to South African citizens during the protests in 
Swaziland.

     Loyiso
 Langeni commented in the newspaper, ‘This is in stark contrast to the 
swiftness with which SA would react in condemning human rights abuses in
 regions such as the Middle East, western Sahara and Rwanda.

  ‘SA recently recalled its highest ranking
 diplomatic representatives to Israel and Rwanda in protest against 
human rights abuses there. This is the strongest action a government can
 take short of cutting all ties with another country.’

     Langeni
 goes on, ‘Yet several attempts by Business Day last 
week to get a comment from the ministry on the suppression of political 
parties and human rights abuses in Swaziland were met with silence. This
 raises the question of whether SA considers the aspirations of the 
Swazi s for a free and democratic dispensation as not deserving the same
 attention as those in Palestine and the Morocco-invaded western Sahara 
region.’

     Langeni
 concludes, ‘SA is vocal about its enviable track record of a being a 
progressive, human-rights centred nation. Is it not time that SA, as the
 most powerful and influential country in the region, extends this 
culture to neighbouring Swaziland?’

     The
 Morning Star, UK,
 carried an article that has also appeared in a number of other 
publications by Mike Marqusee, in which he writes, ‘Swaziland is a small
 country with a big problem. The 1.1 million inhabitants of the 
land-locked southern African kingdom live under the thumb of one of the 
world's last absolute monarchies, a venal and repressive regime whose 
plunder of the country is systematic and comprehensive.’

     Elsewhere,
 Mario
 Masuku, of the banned People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO)
 spoke to the Voice of America (VoA).
  He said the Swazi people’s demand for democratic
 change and the rule of law will not be silenced by government threats.

     He
 was interviewed after Swaziland’s illegally-appointed
 Prime Minister Barnabas
 Dlamini said his government will consider punishing
 political dissidents by beating their feet with spikes.




      Dlamini
 also warned that foreigners who interfere in the country’s internal 
politics will face the same punishment.    

  VoA reports that analysts said 
that, although a constitution was reintroduced in 2006, the level of 
power invested in King Mswati III is so significant that the country can
 be considered an absolute monarchy.

     Despite
 the constitution, the king holds executive, legislative and judicial 
power.

  Critics say the government has 
successfully stifled political opposition by putting pressure on human 
rights organizations, trade unions, and civil society groups and banning
 all political parties.
Link 
http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2010/09/swazi-rights-read-all-about-them.html 





      

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