(From Swazi Media Commentary 26 September 2008 www.swazimedia.blogspot.com)




The elections in Swaziland last Friday (19 September 2008) were riddled with 
bribery and other malpractices.

No
less a figure than Swaziland’s Attorney General (AG) Majahenkhaba
Dlamini has said that candidates bribed voters to win parliamentary
seats.

Dlamini said there were a lot of mischievous deeds done by the candidates, 
according to the Swazi Observer yesterday (25 September 208).

Dlamini
was coy giving details saying, ‘There are a lot of things that happened
but I can not be specific since that would seem I am attacking people.’

Dlamini said people declared publicly that they were given money to vote.

He
said that was not the way to win in an election and added the
candidates knew what was expected of them but they continued to break
the law.

‘Giving people money is against the law and the candidates know that but they 
continue defying the law', the Observer quoted him saying.

Despite his own evidence to the contrary, Dlamini said that, all in all, the 
elections were free and fair.

I notice that the ‘official’ election observers the African Union and the 
Pan-African Parliament also both declared the election ‘free and fair’
even though they decried the lack of democracy in Swaziland where
political parties are banned, the parliament has little power, and King Mswati 
III makes all the important decisions.

This makes me wonder what it would take for them to declare an election 
‘unfair’. As I wrote
on 17 September 2008 there was a lot of confusion among the observers
themselves as to what it was they were meant to be observing and what
rules governed election conduct in Swaziland.

The AG is not the
only one calling foul on these elections. Former cabinet minister
Mfomfo Nkambule has said it was an ‘open secret’ that some of the MPs
paid voters to vote for them. He said the danger in this was that a
government of people who buy favours was being created, according to
the Observer on Wednesday (24 September 2008).

The Observer reported,
‘His assertion is supported by several court applications in which
candidates complained that their competitors had paid voters.

‘In
one case, an election winner was said to have distributed E50 [more
than a week’s income for more than 70 percent of the population] to
each voter whilst in another incident one was alleged to have
distributed E10 to voters.’

The Observer also
reported one commentator, who declined to be named, who said the bulk
of the elected MPs were people who had been associated with crime. ‘One
was convicted for theft of drugs, two were impeached for fraud, whilst
a few others had a brush with the law in this way or the other,’ he
said.

I don’t know whether to laugh or to cry over one report in the Observer on 
Tuesday
(23 September 2008) that said candidate Celucolo Dino Dlamini in
Kukhanyeni has told voters they won’t be getting the kombi (small bus)
he promised them, because they failed to elect him.

Apart from bribery there are other suspected malpractices emerging.

More
than 50 residents of Dlangeni chiefdom marched to the royal kraal in
protest of the newly- elected Member of Parliament. According to the Times of 
Swaziland on Wednesday (24
September 2008) they are angry about the election process that allowed
a candidate to win the election even though he did not have a home in
the area.

In another case, the minister of health Njabulo Mabuza
who lost his seat has blamed chiefs in the area for instructing their
subjects who to vote for.

The Times (23 September 2008)
reported, ‘Mabuza alleged that the three traditional leaders interfered
with the voting process in that they allegedly instructed their
subjects on who to vote for. He said his ultimate downfall was the
decision to conduct the elections at the chiefdom level because that is
where the voters received the orders.’

The Times went on, ‘He alleged that even his campaign team was intimidated and 
threatened by some people.’

In
another case, 400 residents at Emampondweni and Ebulekeni under
Zombodze Emuva resolved to march to the Elections and Boundaries
Commission to protest that one of the candidates had won the primary
election fraudulently, the Observer reported (22 September 2008).

See also
ELECTIONS
SWAZILAND ELECTIONS 2008 BLOGSITE

Link 
http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2008/09/bribery-rife-at-swaziland-election.html 



      
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