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I
INTRODUCTION
Swaziland, independent
monarchy in southeastern Africa, bounded on the east by Mozambique and on the
southeast, south, west, and north by South Africa. It covers an area of 17,363
sq km (6,704 sq mi).
II
LAND AND RESOURCES
Swaziland is roughly oval-shaped.
The elevation of the land decreases from west to east. The mountainous western
portion in places reaches an altitude of more than 1,200 m (more than 4,000 ft)
above sea level. The hilly central region, or veld (grassland), has an
average elevation of about 600 m (about 2,000 ft). The eastern region, or low
veld, is a rolling area that averages from 120 to 300 m (about 400 to 1,000 ft)
above sea level; it is bounded on the east by the Lebombo Mountains. The
principal rivers are the Komati, Lusutfu, and Umbuluzi. The steady flow of the
rivers, fed by abundant rain in the mountains, supports irrigation and
hydroelectric power projects in the lowlands. Swaziland also has quantities of
several valuable minerals, including coal, asbestos, diamonds, and gold.
The climate is mostly temperate,
with cool temperatures at higher elevations and more tropical weather in the low
veld. Precipitation, which is heavier toward the west, is concentrated in the
warmer months of October through April; the rest of the year is characterized by
sunny, clear weather. The temperature in Mbabane, located in the western
highlands, ranges from 15° to 25° C (59° to 77° F) in January and 6° to 19° C
(42° to 67° F) in July.
III
POPULATION
Nearly all of the people in
Swaziland are ethnic Swazi, although there are small populations of Zulu,
Tsonga, Asians, and Europeans. About 62 percent of the country's land has been
set aside by the monarchy for exclusive use by the Swazi people. Much of the
remaining land is owned by Europeans or foreign companies.
The population (1998 estimate) is 966,462, giving Swaziland a
population density of 56 persons per sq km (144 per sq mi). In 1998 the annual
population growth rate was estimated at 2 percent. The capital and principal
town is Mbabane (population, 1986, 38,290). Lobamba is the traditional royal
capital. Some 33 percent of the population lives in urban areas.
Traditional religious beliefs are held by about two-fifths of
the people, and almost all the remainder are at least nominally Christians. The
official languages of Swaziland are siSwati, a Bantu language, and English, in
which most government business is conducted. In 1998 life expectancy at birth
was estimated to be 39.8 years for women and 37.3 years for men.
In 1996 some 202,439 children attended primary schools, and some
54,873 were enrolled in secondary schools. The University of Swaziland (1964) is
in Kwaluseni. The literacy rate is estimated to be 77 percent.
IV
ECONOMY
Swaziland’s labor force is split
between two dominant sectors, agriculture and services. Some 39 percent of its
workforce engaged in crop or livestock production, while another 38 percent hold
service jobs. The country's economy is tied to that of South Africa through
trade and currency links, and can rise or fall depending on the fortunes of its
large neighbor. Gross domestic product in 1997 was $1.3 billion, or an average
of $1,370 per person.
About three-quarters of the
population live on Swazi national land, most cultivating staple crops of maize
or herding livestock. The country's most productive farmland, however, are the
tracts in private hands, which produce about 75 percent of the country's
exports. Chief cash crops are sugarcane grown on irrigated land, cotton, citrus
fruits, and pineapples. Livestock includes 650,000 cattle and 435,000 goats.
Swaziland also has an important forestry industry. Much of the 146,000 hectares
(361,000 acres) of forestland is devoted to production of pine. Because of a
favorable climate, pine reaches maturity in Swaziland more than twice as fast as
in Europe.
Swaziland has large reserves of anthracite coal, which with
asbestos form the country's mineral exports. Asbestos extraction has diminished
in recent years because health risks associated with the material have decreased
its use. Industrial diamond mining began in the mid-1980s. Much of Swaziland's
manufacturing is related to agricultural and wood processing. The tourism
industry is growing; some 322,000 people visited Swaziland in 1997, attracted by
the country's game preserves and mountain scenery.
The principal exports are sugar, wood and wood pulp, canned and
fresh fruit, and mineral products. Along with Botswana, Namibia, and Lesotho,
Swaziland is a member of a customs union with South Africa, and the country is
Swaziland's chief trading partner. The unit of currency is the lilangeni
(plural: emalangeni), which is maintained at an equal value with the
South African rand (4.61 emalangeni equal U.S.$1; 1997 average).
Swaziland has 294 km (183 mi) of railroads, linking it to the
ports of Maputo in Mozambique and Richard's Bay and Durban in South Africa. The
road system extends 3,810 km (2,367 mi). The country's only large airport is at
Matsapa, near Mbabane.
V
GOVERNMENT
National executive power in
Swaziland is vested in a king who appoints, and is assisted by, a prime minister
and cabinet. One house of parliament is the National Assembly, which has 65
members, 55 of whom are directly elected from a list of candidates nominated by
traditional local councils or directly elected and 10 appointed by the king. The
30-member Senate includes 10 members who are elected by the National Assembly
and 20 who are appointed by the king. Judicial authority is vested in a high
court and subordinate courts. Civil matters among Swazi are handled by
traditional leaders, subject to appeals to the High Court.
VI
HISTORY The
earliest known people in what is now Swaziland were the Ndwandwe, who lived in
the southeast. In the mid-18th century the Ndwandwe defeated the Ngwane people,
who had entered the region from the south. The Ngwane settled in the southwest,
and warred periodically with the Ndwandwe. The early 19th century was marked by
a prolonged series of local wars, centering around the powerful Zulu to the
south (see mfecane). Ngwane leader Sobhuza led his people to higher
elevations around 1820 to escape Zulu attacks. In this period the Ngwane became
known as the Swazi, and Sobhuza established the Swazi kingdom in what is now
central Swaziland.
When European settlers entered the area during the 1880s, the
Swazi granted concessions to them that endangered the independence of the
territory. An Anglo-Boer convention of 1894 placed Swaziland under the
administration of the Union of South Africa (now the Republic of South Africa).
Administration passed to the British governor of Transvaal in 1903 and to the
British high commissioner for South Africa in 1907. In 1967 Swaziland became
internally self-governing. The nation attained full independence on September 6,
1968, with King Sobhuza II as head of state. The king suspended the constitution
in 1973 and banned all political activity; under a new constitution, promulgated
in 1978, a bicameral parliament was indirectly elected. Following the death of
Sobhuza in 1982, a power struggle ensued to determine which of the king's wives
would rule as queen regent and which of his many sons would ascend the throne.
In 1986 Crown Prince Makhosetive was installed as King Mswati III.
Shortly after assuming the throne
Mswati consolidated his power by abolishing the Liqoqo, an advisory body
that traditionally gave binding suggestions. During the late 1980s and early
1990s members of organized political parties, which are illegal under the
Swaziland constitution, secretly criticized the king and government. Their
continued call for more accountability in government led Mswati to open public
dialogue on changes to the political process. As a result of this dialogue, a
majority of the National Assembly was directly elected for the first time in
1993. In 1994 the king announced that a new constitution would be drafted
incorporating the new election process. In 1996, after no progress had been
made, the king appointed a constitutional reform commission to hear proposals
for a draft constitution. In the following years the king and the commission
were criticized by many Swazis for blocking the reform progress. Opposition
groups staged a boycott of October 1998 elections to the National Assembly.
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