African Dictator

 

27 June 2011

 

SOURCE http://www.africandictator.org/?p=2816


 

Swazi king humiliates
himself

By: Richard
Rooney 

 







Swaziland’s
King Mswati III stands humiliated before his own subjects and the wider world.


The king,
sub-Saharan Africa’s last absolute monarch, took it upon himself to save his
kingdom from financial meltdown. He flew to South Africa to see Jacob Zuma, the
man he thought was his pal, to borrow E10 billion (US$1.47 billion) to bail out
the Swazi economy.


And he
got a bloody nose for his troubles: metaphorically, of course.


Zuma, the
democratically-elected president of South Africa, is said to have told the king
he would only meet him to discuss a loan if the king unbanned political parties
in Swaziland and no longer took an active part in politics himself.


That was
unacceptable to the king and the meeting didn’t take place. King Mswati would
never give up power over his subjects.


Despite
the lies that the Swazi press tell about King Mswati, he does not have the
interests of his subjects at heart. We already know that in February this year
(2011) he received a 23 percent increase in his budget when just about every
government department had to cut by 20 percent. It is also whispered that the
king demanded his whole annual budget upfront in one go to make sure he got it
all if Swaziland did go into financial meltdown.


He
couldn’t care less whether 7,000 public servants might have to lose their jobs
as part of a so-called Financial Adjustment Roadmap put forward by the
government he handpicks to win the support of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF). Nor does he care that his whole kingdom will suffer from public
expenditure cuts.


So we
knew that the king is selfish beyond extremes, and now we know he has an ego
the size of a continent.


He
decided to ignore the work his government and the IMF had been doing to try to
save the economy and on his own initiative set off to get the money from South
Africa, instead. The Swazi media, the king’s main cheerleaders in his kingdom,
led their audiences to believe it was all a done-deal. The king has spoken:
South Africa will give Swaziland the money and there is no question about it.
Except, this is South Africa we’re talking about and not Swaziland.


South
Africa, the democracy, told the autocratic king where to get off. Why should it
support him to maintain his stranglehold over his subjects, often through fear
and violence?


And the
king has no response. If he wants even to discuss the possibility of getting a
loan from South Africa he must allow Swaziland to become a democracy.


The king
is not in control. He thought he was an international statesman who was
respected by other national leaders, but he is not. He has been exposed for
what he is, a rather small man who is out of touch with his subjects and with
the wider world.


King
Mswati has no standing abroad and he is under increasing pressure at home. The
clock is ticking for him.


Richard
Rooney blogs at Swazi Media Commentary www.swazimedia.blogspot.com

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