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Low turnout expected for parliamentary poll

Despite a boycott call by the Swaziland Democratic Alliance to protest what it says will be a meaningless parliamentary election on Saturday, public apathy is likely to play a bigger role in the expected low voter turnout. "Why should I vote for an MP? They don't do anything for anyone but themselves. If someone from my family were running, I'd vote," said Sesi Khumalo, a resident of the commercial city of Manzini. King Mswati's government was unconcerned in 1993 when only 13 percent of adults voted. However, an election boycott called by pro-democracy groups in 1998 was countered by a government effort to get people to the polls. Bad weather was used as an excuse to extend voting by two days. Good weather is expected for Saturday, which has been declared a public holiday to ensure better voter turnout. Not all the nation's 55 constituencies selecting an MP will hold elections. Several lawsuits filed after the primary election must be resolved first, said High Court Justice Josiah Matsebula. "It is not possible to deal with these matters before the secondary elections this Saturday. The elections will have to be postponed," Matsebula said in court on Thursday. Most lawsuits allege vote rigging and other forms of fraud. Violence between supporters of rival candidates has been reported in the press, but no arrests have been made. Chief Electoral Officer Robert Thwala has urged candidates to sleep at police stations near polling places on election night as insurance against ballot box tampering. "We have several types trying by all means to get into parliament, even crooks," Thwala cautioned. A five-member Commonwealth team of election observers is in the country. Political parties are banned by royal decree, so all candidates are running as individuals without the benefit of party platforms. Most candidates are promising voters roads and clinics for their areas if they are elected, although MPs lack the power to deliver on such pledges. King Mswati uses parliament as an "advisory body", a status written into a new constitution the palace is assembling. Besides the 55 elected MPs, Mswati will appoint 10 additional MPs to look after royal interests, making a total of 65. Once in office, MPs swear an oath of allegiance to Mswati. No MP initiates legislation, but deliberates bills submitted by Mswati's hand-picked cabinet. The king can override parliamentary votes, or decree laws into existence without parliament's participation. The popular sentiment among Swazis is that candidates seek to be MPs for personal gain. Some known members of banned political parties are defying the boycott call of the Swaziland Democratic Alliance, and are contesting the election. The most notable is former prime minister Obed Dlamini, the leader of the Ngwane National Liberatory Congress. "My party supports me in my bid. I know how government works, and I can be an effective representative for my constituents, and an advocate for the people's interests," Dlamini told IRIN.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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