The election process has started in Swaziland – but it
has hardly reached fever pitch.
The Elections and Boundaries Commission (EBC), the group
charged with organising the poll, due to take place on two dates in August and
September has struggles to get Swazi people to register. Despite taking the
registration process to the people in their workplaces and villages, the EBC
struggled to generate interest. In some areas local chiefs announced their
subjects would be compelled to register.
King Mswati III extended the dates for registration for a
week in an attempt to encourage more people to participate. By the time the
registration process is over the EBC expects to have signed up about 70 percent
of the people eligible in Swaziland to vote. This compares to 88 percent of
eligible voters who registered for the last election in 2008.
A campaign to boycott the election by prodemocracy groups
has been running and it is likely this has had some effect on the registration
process.
Elsewhere this month, fresh doubts have been raised about
the completion of Sikhuphe Airport, dubbed by many as King Mswati’s vanity
project. One report said the runway was incapable of holding heavy aircraft and
another said only 800 passengers per day on average were forecast to use the
airport.
Swaziland:
Striving For Freedom, now available free of charge on scribd dot com, is
the sixth volume of information, commentary and analysis on human rights taken
from articles first published on the Swazi Media Commentary blogsite in June 2013.
Each month throughout this year a digest of articles will be published bringing
together in one place material that is rarely found elsewhere.
Swazi Media Commentary has no physical base and is
completely independent of any political faction and receives no income from any
individual or organisation. People who contribute ideas or write for it do so
as volunteers and receive no payment.
See also
MAY: ELECTION CHAOS STARTS
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