SWAZILAND: Bomb blast kills two
Source: IRIN
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MBABANE, 22 September 2008 (IRIN) - Two men were killed and a third injured after a bomb exploded on
21 September close to King Mswati III's Lozitha palace, 25kms east of the Swazi capital, Mbabane. Police suspect that the bomb exploded prematurely as it was placed at a road bridge by the
perpetrators. Police said the two men killed were a Swazi national and a man said to be Indian. The man who survived the blast was a 44-year-old South African national and was taken in to police
custody and faces charges of treason - a capital offence. He appeared in Manzini Magistrate's Court on 22 September. A fourth man, aged 30-years-old from Johannesburg in South Africa, fled the scene
and was the subject of a manhunt police said. The bomb blast came in the wake of parliamentary polls on 19 September. According to Swaziland's elections, candidates are permitted to contest the poll
as independents, while political parties are banned, in a system known as Tinkhundla. Mswati remains sub-Saharan Africa's last absolute monarch and holds elections every five year's and then chooses
his prime minister. ProtestThis election has seen mounting protests against the Tinkhundla system, amid calls for a more representative style of democracy. In 1998, following elections, a
security guard was killed by a bomb planted at the offices of the deputy prime minister's offices in Mbabane and there have been a string of bombings since, which remain unsolved. The bomb at
Lozitha bridge, about one kilometre from Swaziland's largest royal palace and a principal residence for Mswati, also houses the King's Office, which administers royal affairs, and the Liqoqo, the band
of royal elders who act as the king's senior advisors. The highway is Swaziland's main road artery connecting Mbabane with the commercial town of Manzini, where the bulk of the country's
manufacturing sector is based. The landlocked country imports the majority of its commercial goods by road from South Africa, most of it by way of the highway that skirts the Lozitha palace. The
bomb exploded shortly before midnight, causing a passing vehicle to flip over. The driver sustained injuries. The People's United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO), one of the country's banned political
parties, has called for a more militant approach to achieving democracy, but denied any part in the bombing. "There seems no end in sight for these bombings. There must be movement toward democratic
change (to stop them)," PUDEMO's president, Mario Masuku, told IRIN. Masuku was locked up in a police van for about six hours on 20 September, after he had attempted to join a pro-democracy protest
that blocked traffic at the South African border post. One of the protest's organisers, the Swaziland Federation of Trade Unions (SFTU), has distanced itself from the use of violence to attain
political goals, after two explosions earlier this month coincided with a march by 15,000 of its members in Mbabane. "The police must find the culprits. We as a union have always said that violence
is not the answer," SFTU Secretary General Jan Sithole said. jh/go/oa © IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org










