Africa

Eswatini deploys army to quell pro-democracy school protests

Soldiers and police have been deployed across schools in Eswatini where, for weeks now, students have been protesting to demand political reforms, according to pro-democracy groups.

School students in Africa’s last absolute monarchy, formerly known as Swaziland, have been boycotting classes and staging low-key protests for the past month.

They are mainly calling for the release of two lawmakers arrested during pro-democracy protests earlier this year, along with better learning conditions and free education.

The southern African country’s army has been deployed “to intimidate, but that has not deterred the students”, Lucky Lukhele, spokesman for the pro-democracy Swaziland Solidarity Network, told the AFP news agency on Monday.

He said 17 students, including a seven-year-old, had been arrested during Monday’s protests.

The Communist Party of Swaziland said at least 10 protesters had been arrested, with one student shot in the leg.

The accounts were not able to be independently verified.

Army spokeswoman Tengetile Khumalo confirmed the deployment but said soldiers were “not an enemy of the people”.

This “doesn’t mean there is war but just an assistance to the other forces to maintain order”, she said.

Mduduzi Gina, general secretary of the Trade Union Congress of Eswatini, said “the students are calling for political reforms”.

“Having the army … and cops deployed in the schools will worsen the situation in Eswatini,” he warned.

Civil society and opposition groups demonstrated in the main cities of Manzini and Mbabane in June, looting shops and ransacking properties, some of which belonged to King Mswati III.

At least 27 people died as police clashed with protesters in some of the worst unrest in the country’s history. -AFP

Show More
Back to top button