(From Swazi Media Commentary 3 October 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).






    Another eyewitness account of 
Swazi police brutality during the Global
 Week of Action for democracy in Swaziland last 
month (September 2010) has been published.



   Morten 
Nielson, Information Officer of Africa
 Contact, Denmark, was one of five people 
threatened with death by police and security forces after being held 
during a raid on an office of the Federation for Socio-Economic Justice 
(FSEJ) in Swaziland on7 September 2010.

  Nielson writes, ‘At around 9.20 [am], 
FSEJ’s coordinator returns to the office and tells us that the police 
are on their way up the stairs leading to the office where we are 
presently seated, and that at least 100 police officers have surrounded 
the building below the office. We decide to open the door voluntarily 
when they arrive.’

  He goes on, ‘The following events are chaotic, to say the 
least. One group of people, who I believe to be plain clothed police 
officers, enter the office shouting and screaming. They immediately 
start beating up one of the local employees of FSEJ, after which I see 
my Danish colleague fall to the floor and try to grab hold of his 
spectacles.

   ‘Suddenly, I feel two hands tightening around my
 throat and a man yelling into my face. At the same time I am being hit 
and slapped on the head. Around 12 plain clothed officers are now in the
 small office. The grip around my neck is loosed after a little while – 
although it feels like a long time.’

  ‘The many angry man (I also believe there was a woman present)
 continue yelling orders at us, however. We are also threatened, some of
 these threats being death threats. We are told that we will never 
return to Denmark and that today will be our last.’

  He and his colleagues are forced out of the office and taken 
to ‘what I believe to be a police station’.



  Nielson continues, ‘We are made to stand in a dark hallway 
with a group of plain clothed policemen standing in front of us. They 
continue with the threats to kill us. They hit anyone who attempts to 
speak. A couple of the senior police officers in uniform try to 
intervene but are told to mind their own business by the plain clothed 
officers.’

  They are then taken to a yard outside.

  ‘There is a large group of heavily armed police officers in 
the yard. They are all carrying truncheons and firearms. They form a 
circle around us and start yelling at us. The atmosphere is very tense 
and I am certain that we are in for a beating,’ Nielson says.

  The police threats continue as the police ‘start to elaborate 
upon how they are going to kill us’.



  He goes on, ‘All five of us are then taken to a police van and
 put in the back. The group of officers are now standing outside the 
police van. They continue to threaten us, in English as well as in 
Swazi. This is meant for our two partners. They are told that they will 
die, that the local chief has been told that they are “political”, and 
that they will therefore be evicted from their homes and land. They are 
also told that they will be strangled and buried alive.’

  Later Nielson is taken for interrogation. ‘I am stood in front
 of a large table facing seven people or so, two or three of them women.
 They start shouting at me to stand right in front of them. They also 
tell the women present to leave the room.



  ‘During the interrogation, everyone asks me questions at the 
same time and all demand that I answer them. They want to know who we 
have met with and why. When I ask for a lawyer and to be able to speak 
with the Danish embassy they become very angry and tell me that I will 
be killed.’

  He goes on, ‘Everything I say is being written down by all the
 officers present. I have no idea who they are as no-one introduced 
themselves. All the officers are plain clothed except for one uniformed 
woman.



  ‘After having been interrogated I am told that I will not be 
going back to Denmark and that they will personally see to it that my 
life will end in the most painful way possible. For the duration of the 
interrogation, pictures are taken of me with my own camera. I am 
subsequently told to delete these pictures. I am then given a 
handwritten piece of paper and told to sign it. I do as I am told even 
though I cannot read the contents without my glasses. They threaten to 
kill me several times as I am been escorted to the van.’

  For the full account of Nielson’s experience, click here. 
  

      This account is one of a number of eyewitness 
testimonies to police brutality on the 7 September. To read more click here,
  here,
 here
 and here.Link 
http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2010/10/eyewitness-to-police-brutality.html





      

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