Southern African nations are entering the modern information age by hammering out policies to coordinate the growth of information and communications technologies (ICT) in their countries.
When King Mswati III dissolved Swaziland’s Parliament this month in anticipation of October elections, he sternly warned prospective candidates not to murder innocent people in order to harvest their body parts to make a "muti" to bring good fortune.
A scheme was concocted in Swaziland to place a "correspondent", announcer Phesheya Dube, right in the heart of Iraq, without any expense, inconvenience or possible danger. In fact, he would not even have to leave the mountaintop capital of Mbabane.
Nationwide mass action sponsored by Swaziland’s labour organisations to protest against government policies did not achieve its goal of shutting down the country completely
Martin, who owns one of Swaziland’s more successful road freight companies, was faced with a choice: to order the execution or to free two South African tsotsis found with his hijacked truck in Gauteng.