A human rights
activist in Swaziland is challenging King Mswati III’s decision to
change the tiny southern African nation’s name to the Kingdom of
eSwatini.
Africa’s
last absolute monarch announced the new name in April at celebrations to
mark the 50th anniversary of Swazi independence from Britain.
However, activist Thulani Maseko argued in a High Court submission that
the decision undermined the constitution and was a waste of money,
especially in a country with the world’s highest HIV/AIDS rate.
‘The people should decide’
He asked that the court set aside the decision as the product of the
whim of the UK-educated monarch taken without any public consultation,
court papers showed on Friday.
“Every citizen has a right to take part in the conduct of public
affairs, directly or through freely chosen representatives,” Maseko said
in the papers.
Most of the landlocked nation’s 1.5 million people eke out a living as farmers or migrant labourers in neighbouring South Africa.
Swaziland holds elections every five years but political parties are
not allowed to contest and the king appoints the Prime Minister.
The Attorney General’s Office, which is named in the papers, has not yet responded to the submission.
-Reuters
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