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Travel to Swaziland: an overview
The Kingdom of Swaziland is landlocked, with South Africa to the north, south and west and Mozambique to the east. It’s very small, but manages to cram a lot of diversity within its borders. People planning to take their holidays in Swaziland would to well to note that English is only spoken as a second language, the first being siSwati.
The capital and administrative city of Swaziland is Mbabane. It’s located in the Highveld plateau on the Mbabane River.
Lobamba is the royal and legislative capital of Swaziland and is just south of...
Travel to Swaziland: an overview
The Kingdom of Swaziland is landlocked, with South Africa to the north, south and west and Mozambique to the east. It’s very small, but manages to cram a lot of diversity within its borders. People planning to take their holidays in Swaziland would to well to note that English is only spoken as a second language, the first being siSwati.
The capital and administrative city of Swaziland is Mbabane. It’s located in the Highveld plateau on the Mbabane River.
Lobamba is the royal and legislative capital of Swaziland and is just south of Mbabane.
Swaziland is divided into four distinct geographic regions, each with its own unique attractions.
Swaziland Attractions
Swaziland has three primary game reserves which provide visitors the chance to go on self-drive safaris or stay overnight and enjoy guided game drives and walks.
Mlilwane Wildlife Sanctuary is the oldest game park in Swaziland and one of its most popular attractions. Once you’re in the sanctuary you can enjoy horse riding, mountain biking, game drives and hiking. All activities are family-friendly, making the sanctuary one of the Swaziland’s favourite holiday spots.
Accommodation in the sanctuary includes the Mlilwane Rest Camp with en-suite huts; the Beehive village offers a more rugged experience with traditional Swaziland dome-shaped huts, with and without bathrooms; self-catering cottages; and log cabins.
The Mkhaya Game Reserve is acclaimed for its conservation projects. The reserve has been credited with saving Swaziland’s black rhino and endemic cattle species (Nguni). If you like a bit of pampering with your accommodation then you’d better try one of Swaziland’s other reserves because Mkhaya has a no-frills policy. Its motto is “closer to nature” and its Stone Camp epitomises this with meals outdoors and semi-open stone and thatch cottages.
Hlane Royal National Park is the largest protected area in Swaziland and people travel from all over the world to hear the lions roar and see the elephants and rhino walk under the big African skies. Lions are the biggest attraction as they symbolise the royal family of Swaziland. Accommodation is to be found at Ndlovu Camp and Bhubesi Camp.
Ndlovu Camp overlooks a waterhole and is great for watching animals come to drink at sunset. Be warned that there is no electricity and that you’ll be sleeping in thatched rondawels or self-catering cottages.
Bhubesi Camp overlooks the Umbuluzana River and provides more comfortable accommodation with stone cottages equipped with electricity.
Should you tire of all the rugged, back-to-nature-ness of the game camps you can always retreat to the Royal Swazi Sun Resort, which is where you’ll find the most luxurious hotel accommodation in Swaziland. You’ll also find casinos and an extremely pampering spa.
Other things to do at the play ground of the rich and famous in Swaziland include golf, hiking the Mdzimba and Lobamba trails, tours of Swaziland’s culture and half-day tours of the various arts and crafts markets in the vicinity.
Finally, if you travel to Swaziland between late August and early September your visit could coincide with the Reed Dance, one of Swaziland’s oldest and most controversial traditions.
Swaziland is alive with culture and packed with friendly people just waiting to make this one of the best holidays of your life.
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Swaziland
Artifacts indicating human activity dating back to the early Stone Age 200,000 years ago have been found in the Kingdom of Swaziland. Prehistoric rock art paintings date from ca. 25,000 B.C. and continue up to the 19th century. The earliest inhabitants of the area were Khoisan hunter-gatherers. They were largely replaced by the Bantu tribes during Bantu migrations who hailed from the Great Lakes regions of Eastern Africa. Evidence of agriculture and iron use dates from about the 4th century and people speaking languages ancestral to current Sotho and Nguni languages began settling no later than the 11th century. The Bantu people known as the Swazis established iron-working and settled farming colonies in the 15th century after crossing the Limpopo river. They experienced great economic pressure from the rival Ndwandwe clans from the south. The country derives its name from a later King, Mswati I. However, Ngwane is an alternative name for Swaziland and Dlamini remains the surname of the royal family, while the name Nkosi means King. Read more on Wikipedia
The head of state is the king or Ngwenyama (lit. Lion), currently King Mswati III, who ascended to the throne in 1986 after the death of his father King Sobhuza II in 1982 and a period of regency. By tradition, the king reigns along with his mother or a ritual substitute, the Ndlovukati (lit. She-Elephant). The former was viewed as the administrative head of state and the latter as a spiritual and national head of state, with real power counter-balancing that of the king, but during the long reign of Sobhuza II the role of the Ndlovukati became more symbolic. As the monarch, the king not only appoints the prime minister—the head of government—but also appoints a small number of representatives for both chambers of the Libandla (parliament). The Senate consists of 30 members, while the House of Assembly has 65 seats, 55 of which are occupied by nominated representatives. Elections are held every five years in November. In 1968, Swaziland adopted a Westminster-style constitution, but in 1973 King Sobhuza suspended it under a royal decree backed by the royalist majority of parliament: in effect a coup by the government against its own constitution. The State of Emergency has since been lifted, or so the government claims even though political activities, especially by pro-democracy movements, are suppressed. In 2001 King Mswati III appointed a committee to draft a new constitution. Drafts were released for comment in May 1999 and November 2000. These were strongly criticized by civil society organizations in Swaziland and human rights organizations elsewhere. In 2005, the constitution was put into effect, though there is still much debate in the country about the constitutional reforms. From the early seventies, there was active resistance to the royal hegemony. The Swazi bicameral Parliament or Libandla consists of the Senate (30 seats; 10 members appointed by the House of Assembly and 20 appointed by the monarch; to serve five-year terms) and the House of Assembly (65 seats; 10 members appointed by the monarch and 55 elected by popular vote; to serve five-year terms) elections: House of Assembly – last held 19 September 2008 (next to be held in 2013) election results: House of Assembly – balloting is done on a non-party basis; candidates for election are nominated by the local council of each constituency and for each constituency the three candidates with the most votes in the first round of voting are narrowed to a single winner by a second round. Read more on Wikipedia
Swaziland is divided into four districts: Each district is further divided into tinkhundla. There are 55 tinkhundla in Swaziland and each elects one representative to the House of Assembly of Swaziland. Read more on Wikipedia
Swaziland lies across a geological fault which runs from the Drakensberg Mountains of Lesotho, north through the Eastern highlands of Zimbabwe, forms the Great Rift Valley of Kenya and, eventually, peters out in present-day Turkey. A small, land-locked Kingdom, Swaziland is bordered in the North, West and South by the Republic of South Africa and by Mozambique in the East. Although Swaziland has a land area of only 17,364 km2, roughly the size of Wales or the American State of New Jersey, it contains four separate geographical regions. These run from North to South and are determined by altitude. Swaziland is located at approximately 26o49'S, 31o38'E.. Swaziland also offers a wide variety of landscapes, from the mountains along the Mozambican border to savannas in the east and rain forest in the northwest. Several rivers flow through the country, such as the Great Usuthu River. Read more on Wikipedia
The seasons are the reverse of those in the Northern Hemisphere with December being mid-summer and June mid-winter. Generally speaking, rain falls mostly during the summer months, often in the form of thunderstorms. Winter is the dry season. Annual rainfall is highest on the Highveld in the West, between 1000 and 2000 mm depending on the year. The further East, the less rain, with the Lowveld recording 500 to 900 mm per annum. Variations in temperature are also related to the altitude of the different regions. The Highveld temperature is temperate and, seldom, uncomfortably hot while the Lowveld may record temperatures around 40 degrees in summer. The average temperatures at Mbabane, according to seasons: Read more on Wikipedia
Swaziland ’s economy is fairly diversified, with agriculture, forestry and mining accounting for about 13 percent of GDP, manufacturing (textiles and sugar-related processing) representing 37 percent of GDP and services – with government services in the lead – constituting 50 percent of GDP. Title Deed Lands (TDLs), where the bulk of high value crops are grown (sugar, forestry, and citrus) are characterized by high levels of investment and irrigation, and high productivity. Nevertheless, the majority of the population – about 75 percent—is employed in subsistence agriculture on Swazi Nation Land (SNL), which, in contrast, suffers from low productivity and investment. This dual nature of the Swazi economy, with high productivity in textile manufacturing and in the industrialized agricultural TDLs on the one hand, and declining productivity subsistence agriculture (on SNL) on the other, may well explain the country’s overall low growth, high inequality and unemployment. Economic growth in Swaziland has lagged behind that of its neighbors. Real GDP growth since 2001 has averaged 2.8 percent, nearly 2 percentage points lower than growth in other Southern African Customs Union (SACU) member countries. Low agricultural productivity in the SNLs, repeated droughts, the devastating effect of HIV/AIDS and an overly large and inefficient government sector are likely contributing factors. Swaziland’s public finances deteriorated in the late 1990s following sizable surpluses a decade earlier. A combination of declining revenues and increased spending led to significant budget deficits. The considerable spending did not lead to more growth and did not benefit the poor. Much of the increased spending has gone to current expenditures related to wages, transfers, and subsidies. The wage bill today constitutes over 15 percent of GDP and 55 percent of total public spending; these are some of the highest levels on the African continent. The recent rapid growth in SACU revenues has, however, reversed the fiscal situation, and a sizable surplus was recorded since 2006. SACU revenues today account for over 60 percent of total government revenues. On the positive side, the external debt burden has declined markedly over the last 20 years, and domestic debt is almost negligible; external debt as a percent of GDP was less than 20 percent in 2006. Read more on Wikipedia
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