(From Swazi Media Commentary, 15 April 2011, www.swazimedia.blogspot.com Also
on Facebook at 
http://www.facebook.com/Swazi.Media.Commentary?v=wall#!/group.php?gid=142383985790674&ref=ts
and Twitter at http://twitter.com/SwaziMedia)






  Swaziland’s secretive police are refusing to 
reveal the names of the three people they arrested on ‘terror’ 
charges.  

And, they won’t give details of what is it 
they are supposed to have done.

That didn’t stop Isaac
 Magagula, Swazi Commissioner of Police, holding a press conference 
yesterday (14 April 2011) to boast of his force’s success.

But, why won’t he 
give the names? What are the police trying to hide?

Magagula did say the 
three were arrested following ‘information in our possession that 
the event [the protests] would be hijacked by elements with ulterior 
motives for perpetrating subversive activities’.

He went on, ‘True to our 
words, there are suspects who have been arrested in connection with 
explosives and incendiary materials that were intended to be used in the
 commission of acts of terror and sabotage during the course of the 
protest action.’

I smell a rat. The 
arrest took place after armed police raided the offices of the Swaziland
 National Association of Teachers (SNAT) on Wednesday (13 April 2011). 
Police were hell-bent on giving the teachers a beating and padlocked 
them in their offices.

In a move 
unprecedented in the history of Swaziland, the word got out to alert the
 international community that a police outrage was about
 to take place. Within minutes, the alarm was raised around the 
world and protests were immediately made to international embassies, 
human rights groups and the media.

The whole world was 
watching. Gone are the days when the Swazi police could pick up a 
‘suspect’ and simply make them disappear. The strong spotlight of the 
world now shines, even on Manzini. 



The police were 
forced to justify their outrageous actions. And then what happened? They
 found three anonymous ‘terror’ suspects’.

Vincent Ncongwane, 
Secretary General of the Swaziland Federation of Labour, isn’t fooled.
 He knows what’s going on. It’s a cover-up for the heavy-handed police 
raid on the SNAT offices. He reckons the ‘suspects’ won’t be convicted 
at court. 

He has history on his
 side. We all remember how the Swazi state locked Mario Masuku, 
President of the People’s United Democratic Movement, up on remand for 
nearly a year on terrorism and sedition charges.

Masuku eventually 
made it to court in 2008 for
 a trial that was expected to last several days.

But, it wasn’t to be:
 the judges laughed the case out of court after a couple of hours. No 
case to answer.

It looks like we 
could have another Masuku on our hands.

So Magagula, what 
about these three ‘terrorists’: tell the people what you really have on 
them.

If you want us to 
believe a word you say: put up or shut up.
Link http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2011/04/why-wont-police-name-suspects.html 


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