Showing posts with label PUDEMO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PUDEMO. Show all posts

Monday, September 29, 2008

'NEED TO CHANGE POLITICAL SYSTEM'

Weekend Observer


27 September 2008


Political system need to change

Lobamba Lomdzala MP elect Marwick Khumalo says the political system needs to change. In fact, he said the major responsibility of the new government would be to manage transition to a new political dispensation.

“We cannot rub away from the issue of change. Firstly, we need to be honest to ourselves when we do an assessment of this country. Today, in the entire region, Swaziland is only second to Zimbabwe in terms of poor economic growth. If Zimbabwe is No.14, we are No. 13 in terms of economic growth. You ask yourself why is that?

“Today in this country, people want their children to go and join the army as soldiers. Not because it is the good thing to do but because it is one of the few secure jobs available. Those of us who grew up in the middle 70s, had a host of opportunities and in fact, we ran away from being soldiers. People had a choice to go to the mines, sugar-belt and host of other opportunities.

“When you read a book by Botswana’s former President Ketumile Masire, he said in the early 80s Swaziland was far ahead of them in almost all respects, but look where we are today,” he said.

Khumalo said the leadership of this country has the challenge to take the lead and remove it from this quagmire. He said it no longer was a justification to say: “EmaSwati atsi.”

“I have faith in His Majesty King Mswati III to lead the country out of this quagmire we find ourselves in. Let us not rely on what the advisers say. Let me share this with you, in 1963, there was a referendum and Swazis chose a Lion instead of the other thing, which was the political parties.

“The British said, even when you have won the referendum, we have legislated that the first Legislative Council in June 1964 will be under the political parties.

“Despite what Swazis had said about political parties, King Sobhuza II in his wisdom decided to form Imbokodvo National Movement in order to beat the British in their own game. He announced it on April 16, 1964, hardly two months before the legislative council’s election in June.

“He never went back to the Swazis to say since you have rejected political parties, we will not participate, but he took the lead and formed one that would represent the interests of the Swazis,” he said. Khumalo said Imbokodvo won the Legislative Council seats in a landslide victory and so was the 1968 Parliamentary Elections.

“It was only in 1972 that they lost one seat to the opposition.

“The same happened in Tanzania, Julius Nyerere did a referendum between one party versus multi-parties. Tanzanians voted overwhelmingly for a single party, Chama Cha Maphiduzi (CCM). But Nyerere in his wisdom decided against it, saying all Tanzanians will vote for CCM, but if there are those who believe in something different they must be given space and contest as well. So it has been CCM through and through. He said because they are not an island, they live within a community of nations, other political parties will be allowed to contest power against their favoured CCM party.

“The same is happening in Botswana, the ruling party has been in power since independence in 1964,” he said.

Khumalo said that’s what stopped the one time Imbokodvo National Movement to do what it did in the 60s. “I say this because, the more we keep on delaying this question the more things get complicated for ourselves. By the time they decide to do it, they will find that they have no support of the masses.

“To say BakaNgwane want Tinkhundla, you will say that today and tomorrow it is quite another. You cannot bank on the electorate as it changes from time to time depending on the environment,” he said. Khumalo said it is time for the leadership to take the lead.

“We have seen His Majesty the King taking a lead on some of the sensitive issues in the past, what would stop him to do so now? He decided against a Constitutional clause that wanted to impose Christianity as the official religion. The whole country wanted it in the Constitution, but in his wisdom, decided that there shall be freedom of religion in this country.

“We respected that, because we thought he had hindsight of what we don’t know and we respected his call. Even today, this is what has to happen. We have not lost faith in him,” Khumalo said.

… Sive Siyinqaba can beat PUDEMO hands down

Khumalo said by forming Sive Siyinqaba National Movement they have tasted the mood of the Swazi populace.

“I can tell you today, for example, if you can pit us against PUDEMO, we can beat them hands down. What is it that stops the leadership to use that as a basis for their decision.

“This is because people who do not carry any political weight or have any political support on the ground undermine and bad mouth Sive Siyinqaba to be an enemy of the institution, yet it is the same organisation that protects the institution of the Monarch. It is interesting to note that those who bad mouth us, cannot even say a word to the electorate, when political parties are freed, they will be lost in the political system, because they don’t have political support or have courage to face the electorate,” Khumalo who doubles as Sive Siyinqaba’s Secretary General said.

New government must manage transition

The Lobamba Lomdzala MP elect said the principal responsibility of the new government will be to manage the transition from this political dispensation to a new one.

Khumalo said what is a fact is that the country will definitely not remain the same, even if it wants to. “We will have the external pressure to change. Zimbabwe’s problems seem to be getting out of the agenda.

“Don’t undermine the presence of the so many African observer missions during this election. Read carefully their reports, based on those reports our fate will be decided,” he said.

He said Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe, after winning the so-called run-off election, went to the African Union Summit in Egypt where he claimed he had won, but the entire African Union leadership showed him all the African Mission Observers that discredited his victory and told him in no uncertain terms to go back home and forge a Unity Government.

“They quoted him the Pan African Parliament report, the SADC and AU Observer Missions reports and said to him all these reports don’t originate from some imperialists somewhere, but Africa, all indicating that the election was not free nor fair. How then does he justify his election,” he said. Khumalo said he is not one excited by multi-party democracy but what he is for is that a person should be free to choose. “A person must say I don’t want to be a member of any political party. I want to stand as an independent. The law should be such that it allows those who want to belong or form political parties. And those who want to run government as political parties should be free to do so.

“Those who want political parties should not suffocate those who want to be independent candidates. The independent candidate should not suppress political parties. The law should be such that all of us are accommodated. As it is right now, the law only accomodates individual representation, yet the Constitution talks of freedom of assembly, freedom of expression and association. Those are the basic tenants for democracy. Where is the law that operationalise the existence of political parties and allow them to be in government? If anything, we will learn very late that political parties will in fact favour them more than they castigate them now.

The majority party, which will be purely conservative in nature, will favour the existing establishment, at least for some few years to come. “Look, as we talk, they are worried about the new Parliament as to what kind of animal it is. They don’t know how we will be and this will be so as long as we keep the current system of governance. Such a system does not allow for predictability – it can be something favourably to them or totally different animal to deal with,” Khumalo stated.

He said because MPs come from different shades, they end up ganging up against government, which is the Executive and shoot down anything they come up with. Khumalo said such a scenario is easily avoided in a multi-party state, because projects are carried out without much noise even though they may look unpopular to some people. “We gang up on issues against cabinet, which is forever on a weak position to convince the majority of the members.

“ If there is a ruling party, things would go smooth and the world would understand us and the economy would improve,” he said.

Khumalo said the other challenge will be to get the country out of the economic abyss it is in.

“All other issues that affect us are interconnected to the poor economic growth. Many people today in government leadership or in the private sector send their children to South Africa not only to acquire better education but also to get IDs in order to work in that country once they have finished schools.

“Why? Because our country is not good enough,” he said.

Link http://www.observer.org.sz/weekend/main.php?id=47203&section=mainweek

Thursday, September 25, 2008

ELECTIONS BOARD ROW IN HIGH COURT

Swazi Observer


24 September 2008


Bareless allegations against EBC


By Sabelo Mamba

HIGH Court Judge Mbutfo Mamba said it was insufficient for political parties/unions to merely allege that the Elections and Boundaries Commission (EBC) is not independent because they have no evidence to the contrary.

Judge Mamba said the contention by the political parties was that there was no evidence to show that EBC is independent.

He observed that this was a conclusion and the facts upon which it was based were not stated.

"This is equivalent to saying the Commission is not independent because it is not independent. It does not say much, does it?” remarked the judge.

The judge was handing down his own verdict of a High Court full bench matter in which the political parties/unions were seeking an order declaring the appointment of the members of the EBC unlawful.

They further sought an order declaring the composition of the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) unconstitutional.

Judge Mamba was sitting with Justice Stanley Maphalala and Justice Jacobus Annandale.

The applicants are Peoples United Democratic Movement, Ngwane National Liberatory Congress, Swaziland Federation of Trade Unions, Swaziland Federation of Labour and the Swaziland National Association of Teachers.

Cited as respondents are Prime Minister, Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs, Attorney General, Chairman of the Constitution Drafting Committee, Parliament Speaker and Senate President.

Justice Mamba said the rest of the attack was on the individual members of the EBC and relates to the individual qualification.

The judge said there was no requirement anywhere in the constitution that the EBC must as a matter of law, comprise members of all different societal groupings in the country; including those not aligned to any recognised grouping.

"The contention that the independence of the commission can only be guaranteed if the membership of the commission comprises the multiple political and non-political formations in the country, is in my view erroneous," he said.

"To seek a declaratory order of unconstitutionality on the basis that the JSC is not independent, contrary to the law, without laying out why, how or in what respects it is said it is unconstitutional, is in my respectful view, meaningless."

He said it was not necessary for him to consider the further objection relating to whether or not the EBC and JSC have the necessary locus standi (legal authority) to sue and be sued.

Attorney General Majahenkhaba Dlamini assisted by Mndeni Vilakati were appearing for the respondents.

Political parties were represented by Thulani Maseko and Paul Shilubane.

Link http://www.observer.org.sz/main.php?id=47118&section=main

SWAZI BOMB BLAST KILLS TWO

IRIN


22 September 2008


SWAZILAND: Bomb blast kills two


MBABANE, 22 September 2008 (IRIN) - Two men were killed and a third injured after a bomb exploded on 21 September close to King Mswati III's Lozitha palace, 25kms east of the Swazi capital, Mbabane.


Police suspect that the bomb exploded prematurely as it was placed at a road bridge by the perpetrators. Police said the two men killed were a Swazi national and a man said to be Indian. The man who survived the blast was a 44-year-old South African national and was taken in to police custody and faces charges of treason - a capital offence. He appeared in Manzini Magistrate's Court on 22 September.


A fourth man, aged 30-years-old from Johannesburg in South Africa, fled the scene and was the subject of a manhunt police said.


The bomb blast came in the wake of parliamentary polls on 19 September. According to Swaziland's elections, candidates are permitted to contest the poll as independents, while political parties are banned, in a system known as Tinkhundla. Mswati remains sub-Saharan Africa's last absolute monarch and holds elections every five year's and then chooses his prime minister.


Protest


This election has seen mounting protests against the Tinkhundla system, amid calls for a more representative style of democracy.


In 1998, following elections, a security guard was killed by a bomb planted at the offices of the deputy prime minister's offices in Mbabane and there have been a string of bombings since, which remain unsolved.


The bomb at Lozitha bridge, about one kilometre from Swaziland's largest royal palace and a principal residence for Mswati, also houses the King's Office, which administers royal affairs, and the Liqoqo, the band of royal elders who act as the king's senior advisors.


The highway is Swaziland's main road artery connecting Mbabane with the commercial town of Manzini, where the bulk of the country's manufacturing sector is based. The landlocked country imports the majority of its commercial goods by road from South Africa, most of it by way of the highway that skirts the Lozitha palace.


The bomb exploded shortly before midnight, causing a passing vehicle to flip over. The driver sustained injuries.

The People's United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO), one of the country's banned political parties, has called for a more militant approach to achieving democracy, but denied any part in the bombing.


"There seems no end in sight for these bombings. There must be movement toward democratic change (to stop them)," PUDEMO's president, Mario Masuku, told IRIN.


Masuku was locked up in a police van for about six hours on 20 September, after he had attempted to join a pro-democracy protest that blocked traffic at the South African border post.


One of the protest's organisers, the Swaziland Federation of Trade Unions (SFTU), has distanced itself from the use of violence to attain political goals, after two explosions earlier this month coincided with a march by 15,000 of its members in Mbabane.


"The police must find the culprits. We as a union have always said that violence is not the answer," SFTU Secretary General Jan Sithole said.


jh/go/oa

© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis:


Link http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/07159621f20fff9bcca800f44cc0ed70.htm

Saturday, September 20, 2008

COPS LOCK PROTEST LEADERS IN VAN

Swazi News


20 September 2008


Jan, union leaders locked in cops’ vans for six hours


By SIHLE MAVUSO


MBABANE - About 10 progressive groups members and labour movement leaders were taken on a six-hour hell ride by members of the Royal Swaziland Police force hours before the foiled boarder blockade on Thursday.


Swaziland Federation of Trade Unions (SFTU) Secretary General, Jan Sithole, Swaziland National Association of Teachers (SNAT) Secretary General Dominique Nxumalo and member, Sibongile Mabuza, PUDEMO’s Jerome Shongwe and others were bundled into two police and correctional services vans upon arrival at Ngwenya border where they were to meet with their members.


They were taken on a cross-country ride with their knees resting on their chests given the sitting arrangement at the back of the vans. It was unbearable, they claim.


Bundled


They were bundled into the vans shortly after their arrival at Ngwenya Boarder Post where they were to also meet with their South African counterparts from COSATU in staging the blockade.


Of interest was that police opted to drive with them through Pigg’s Peak via the Madlangempisi road to Manzini from Ngwenya. Police Public Relations Officer Superintendent Vusi Masuku said this was done for security reasons. This newspaper wanted to know the rationale behind taking a longer route to Manzini.


Narrating the ordeal, Sithole said it was a torturing experience. Sithole said they were not even allowed to respond to the call of nature until they were at Pigg’s Peak Correctional Services where they were ushered into a prison toilet like criminals.


"They loaded us into a van at Ngwenya where we were kept for over an hour inside. We asked to be taken to the toilet but they refused. Instead they drove with us to Motshane where they stopped for over 30 minutes and not attending to our requests," he said.


He added that from there they were taken to Pigg’s Peak Correctional Services where after sometime they were allowed to go to the toilet. "From there we were taken into the cars again and they drove us through a dirty road in the plantations. It was hot in the back and no one cared about how we felt," said Sithole in a low tone.


He said moments later when he peeped through he noticed that they were at Mandlangemphisi where they took the main road to Manzini. "We were taken to the Manzini Regional head quarters where we were asked a few questions and released. To us this was a clear indication that government has total disregard of human life. How would you expose us to such unbearable conditions when you claim to be a caring government," he said.


United Democratic Front (UDF) chief, Barnes Dlamini said they were not taking the actions of the police lightly. He said they will take the matter up with government and they would not rest until justice is done.


Other political formations members were dumped in some forests at Nkhaba after they were apprehended by the police on their way to Ngwenya Boarder Gate. They were rescued by a vehicle from SUFIAWU. On the other side of the fence, about 100 or so COSATU members converged but their presence did not affect the flow of traffic. Things were generally normal.


Questioning


Police PRO Masuku said Sithole and the others were not arrested per se but were taken for questioning in Manzini following their threats to close or block the country’s boarders.


He said they would not have allowed Sithole and the other protestors to close the internationally gazetted entry and exit point because that would be violating international laws.


Speaking on the route the police used to Manzini, Masuku said: "Police had to use an alternative route to Manzini because they were trying to avoid a confrontation with the other protestors who were coming to the boarder".


He explained that the protestors were rounded up before they could fulfil their mission and they were taken to Manzini to answer on why they had to go against warnings from the head of government about the boarder blockade.


Masuku said allegations that they confiscated the union leaders’ cellphones were not related to the truth. "It’s all lies," he said emphatically.


Link http://www.times.co.sz/News/1542.html