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SWAZILAND
Absolute ruler King Mswati III learned just how small
the global village can be when he signed a June 22 media decree that was
immediately denounced by human rights organizations and governments worldwide.
Decree No. 2 made it a seditious offense, punishable
with a 10-year jail term, to "impersonate, insult, ridicule, or put
into contempt" the king, tribal chiefs, and state officials. The
decree allowed the banning of publications without appeal, removed bail
for a number of press offenses, and raised penalties for libel. It also
upheld a ban on the political opposition and the suspension of the Swazi
Constitution, both in place since 1973.
The king's decree marked a climax in his government's
protracted face-off with the kingdom's small independent press. The confrontation
began in early 2000, after authorities shut down the entire state-owned
press for criticizing the Swazi police. (The papers resumed publishing
in February 2001 with an entirely new staff).
As international criticism of Swaziland's press
freedom record mounted, the government launched a satellite news television
channel, Channel S, ostensibly to counter perceptions that the king was
quashing democracy and violating human rights. Channel S was supposed
to air in 17 countries.
In late July, a CPJ delegate visited the Swazi capital,
Mbabane, and met with journalists from the independent press, members
of the political opposition, and labor leaders. Managers and journalists
from the state media declined to be interviewed, saying that their "hands
[were] tied."
CPJ found that tensions between the state and private
media have sharpened since economist Sibusiso Dlamini became prime minister
five years ago. For example, the Swazi National Association of Journalists
(SNAJ) has only 70 members, although the state media employs over 140
media workers. Members of the independent press say their public sector
colleagues have been instructed to avoid professional groups not sanctioned
by the authorities.
Prime Minister Dlamini is effectively the "editor-in-chief"
of all state and pro-government newspapers. He presides over a weekly
gathering of editors and vets stories before they are printed. Local journalists
told CPJ that it was nearly impossible to investigate sensitive issues
because their requests for government-held information are routinely channeled
through a daunting bureaucratic maze.
On March 2, local BBC stringer Thulani Mthethwa
and others launched a new weekly magazine called Guardian and announced
that they intended to cover palace intrigues, until then an untouchable
subject for Swazi journalists. In its second issue, Guardian covered
rumors that King Mswati was in ill health, having been poisoned by one
of his many wives. Other articles reported on the royal family's efforts
to throttle civic organizations. Two days later, on May 4, the state registrar
of newspapers suspended the Guardian, claiming the magazine had
not been properly registered. The authorities also banned the monthly
magazine The Nation after it ran similar reports.
In mid-May, Parliament threatened to revive the
oppressive Media Council Bill, which had been shelved in 1997. And after
the High Court lifted the ban on The Nation in late May, Prime
Minister Dlamini hastened to re-impose it on state security grounds. King
Mswati pitched his ill-advised Decree No. 2 as a definitive solution to
the crisis in late June. But the government withdrew the decree on July
24, sealing an important victory for the press and for Swazi democracy.
Independent observers concur that pressure from
the United Sates, whose trade agreements with Swaziland keep the tiny
kingdom afloat, forced the king to scrap Decree No. 2.
The ban on The Nation was finally lifted
in late June, after editors brokered a gentlemen's agreement with the
authorities. In late August, the High Court allowed the Guardian
to resume publishing. Swazi officials promptly appealed the ruling; the
parties were still negotiating a settlement at year's end.
In November, senior police officials threatened
three Swazi stringers for foreign media with harsh reprisals if they wrote
negative reports about the king. The three are BBC stringer Mthethwa,
Lunga Masuku of African Eye News, and Bheki Matsebula of Sowetan Sunday
World.
Also in November, lawmakers endorsed a proposal
to fine journalists over US$1,000 if they misrepresent any parliamentary
debate. But King Mswati seemed to have adopted a more tolerant attitude
by year's end. In early December, The Mouth That Never Lies, as the king
is also known, commissioned a 15-member team to draft a new, more liberal
constitution within the next 18 months.
May 4
The Guardian
LEGAL ACTION
The Nation
LEGAL ACTION
The government announced that all newspapers that had not been registered
under the Books and Newspapers Act of 1963 would be closed.
Any publication that was not registered but had been in existence for
more than five years would have two weeks to register. All others would
have to close down completely and then apply for registration.
Also on May 4, the independent newspaper The Guardian, which
started as an online publication in 2000 and launched as a print newspaper
the following year, received a hand-delivered letter from the government
stating that the publication was not registered and would have to cease
production immediately. According to Guardian management, however,
the paper had obtained a publication license and had deposited a bond
with a bank.
That same day, police impounded all copies of The Guardian at
the South African border (the paper is printed in Middleburg, South Africa.)
The copies were transported to police headquarters in Mbabane.
Guardian lawyers filed an urgent application with Chief Justice Stanley
Sapire seeking the release of the impounded papers and an injunction against
the police to stop them from confiscating any further copies.
Sapire reserved judgment until early Saturday morning. Attorney General
Phesheya Dlamini then banned both The Guardian and the independent
monthly The Nation. Dlamini invoked Section 3 of the Proscribed
Publications Act of 1968, which gives the attorney general authority to
ban publications that do not conform to "Swazi morality and ideals."
Both The Guardian and The Nation have been outspoken in
their criticism of the monarchy, particularly King Mswati III, who rules
his kingdom by decree. On May 2, Thulani Mthethwa, editor of the Guardian,
was picked up by police from his office, driven to police headquarters,
and questioned about his paper's coverage of the royal family (see May
2 case).
On May 18, the ban on The Nation was lifted after a Mbabane court
ruled the ban unconstitutional. The court also ordered the government
to cover the newspaper's legal costs.
On May 22, Swazi police confiscated more than 5,000 copies of The
Nation from the publication's premises and from retail stores in Manzini
and Mbabane, Swaziland's two main cities.
On May 23, the two newspapers were again banned through a legal notice
in which Dlamini stated that both were operating illegally and were "prejudicial
to the interests of public order."
On Friday June 1, the ban on The Nation was lifted after an informal
meeting between the attorney general and a senior representative of The
Nation. According to The Nation, Dlamini did not request concessions
from the publication and seemed to be acting out of embarrassment at the
negative publicity generated by the government's campaign against the
independent press.
The Guardian, meanwhile, won its first legal round against the
government when Chief Justice Sapire ordered the state to file an affidavit
explaining why the publication had been proscribed and why the legal notice
banning the publication should not be set aside.
On June 7, Sapire ruled that the government's affidavit was not convincing.
By then, The Guardian had been out of circulation for two months,
although the Internet version, which was unaffected by the ban, continued
to appear.
On August 31, High Court judge J. Annandale declared Dlamini's notice
"invalid," allowing The Guardian to resume publication.
In early November, the government appealed the ruling. The dispute remained
unresolved at year's end.
October 19
Hulasizwe Mkhabela, Times of Swaziland
ATTACKED
Mkhabela, a photographer at the Times of Swaziland, was assaulted
and beaten by police officers in Manzini, Swaziland's largest town. The
journalist was covering a press conference held by leaders of the Federation
of Trade Unions and the outlawed Democratic Alliance (SDA).
Mkhabela was attacked after he took pictures of the officers' heavy-handed
treatment of reporters at the scene. Many journalists were threatened
by officers, while others were forcibly dragged out of the conference
hall. Mkhabela was beaten with a stick before he managed to escape.
Political parties are illegal in Swaziland. One of the country's leading
reformist politicians, SDA head Mario Masuku, was arrested and jailed
earlier in the month on sedition charges. Security forces often harass
journalists covering the SDA and other opposition groups.
Mkabela filed a formal complaint against the police, but the case remained
unresolved at year's end.
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