THOUSANDS of bare-breasted
young Swazi women paraded in front of their king to celebrate chastity and
unity, dismissing criticism of the lavish ceremony in one of Africa's poorest
countries for its last absolute monarch.
Clad in beaded mini-skirts
and clutching machetes and mobile phones, women and girls as young as five
danced and sang tributes on Sunday and Monday to the king and queen mother,
also known as the Great She-Elephant, in a traditional Umhlanga Reed Dance
meant to celebrate womanhood and virginity.
"I'm proud to be Swazi
and to be a virgin. We are here to show unity with the king and with each
other," said 18-year-old Gcebine Dlamini, bracing the cold of the southern
hemisphere's winter in her skimpy outfit as scores of tourists had photos taken
next to the topless women.
King Mswati III, who has
about a dozen wives and a fortune estimated at US$200 million, faced
unprecedented protests last year when his appointed administration ran out of
money after a 2009 recession in neighbouring South Africa.
Despite the straitened
times, the royal household has shown few signs of wanting to tighten its belt.
In July, South Africa's Mail & Guardian newspaper reported that three of
Mswati's wives joined a 66-strong royal entourage heading to Las Vegas on a
shopping spree. There was no comment from the palace.
But women at the annual
event gathered behind the monarch in the weeklong celebrations, even though
police kept a close watch on what they might tell journalists and tourists roaming
the grounds of the royal village, some 20km outside the capital.
In the past, the king has
used the ceremony to choose a new wife, and some girls still hoped to catch the
king's eye.
"If chosen, I would be
able to live a better life than what I have, have a lot of money, live a
queen's life and travel overseas," said Fakazile Dlamini, 14, who arrived
on a lorry from her village 60km away to attend the ceremony.
New royal wives have often
received a BMW and their own palace, fuelling criticism in a country where more
than two-thirds of its 1.4 million people live in abject poverty.
Women's groups and political
opponents say Mswati's penchant for multiple young brides ill befits a country
with the world's highest rate of HIV/AIDS, but the monarch says polygamy is
part of Swazi tradition and cements national unity.
Maidens flocked in from
across the country—some attend the ceremony every year until they marry—cut
reeds from riverbeds, which they then presented to the queen mother in a
mile-long singing and foot-stamping procession.
In the past, they would have
been accommodated by families living close to the royal household but are now
put up in camps and protected from other men.
Even though the girls refuse
to criticise UK-educated Mswati who arrived at the event dressed in beads and
lion cloth, not everyone supported his polygamous lifestyle. "I don't want
to be a queen, I don't want to share my man. Polygamy is not okay,"
Siphesihle Mdluli, 20, who hopes to go on to study medicine, said while waving
her bundle of reeds. (REUTERS)
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