No fewer than 38 virgins have been killed in an auto crash on their way to the festival where Swaziland King chooses wives.
TTB reports that a long time tradition in
Swaziland (Swazi) permits the King, Mswati, to choose a new bride every year (August),
in the Swazi Reed
Dance Festival where the King parades and tests topless under aged virgin girls
publicly to ascertain that their virginity was still intact.
The Sherburne-educated
king is known to pick his wives from the girls who perform for him at the
traditional dance, a tribute to the queen mother. The King had chosen a
19-year-old virgin from the dancing maidens last year August, who became his
14th wife.
Times of Swaziland
reports that dozens of girls and young women were killed during the weekend, as
they travelled to the traditional festival where the King of Swaziland was to pick
a new bride from thousands of topless, dancing virgins.
“When the open-topped
truck collided with another vehicle, before being hit by a second truck as it
travelled along a motorway between the Swazi cities of Mbabane and Manzini
earlier this weekend, at least 38 girls who were to partake in the annual
event, lost their lives,” according to the report, “and about 20 survivors were
being treated.”
As the story goes, the
authorities in Swaziland are being accused of trying to cover up the accident
from human rights group.
The Swaziland
Solidarity Network (SSN) claimed the police attempted to discourage media
report on the deaths.
Photographers were
however, restricted from the scene according to Swazi journalist, for security
reasons, but reports on the tragedy, described the scene as chaoic, as parents
began to arrive at the Raleigh Fitkin Memorial Hospital, in Manzini.
One of the survivors,
Siphelele Sigudla, 18, told newsmen,
“We were about 50 on
board the first truck that smashed into the Toyota van.”
The SSN has called on
the royal family to reconsider going ahead with the festival, which sees about
40,000 participating in the eight-day ceremony.
“We hope that the
families of the deceased girls will hold the royal family accountable for the
deaths of their children,” the SSN group said in a statement, as it alleged a
similar incident had been covered up previously.
“The least that the
royal family can do at this moment is to cancel this year’s reed dance.”
The King in his
condolence statement, said:
“We all have heard
about the dark cloud that has befallen the ‘imbali,” he said, using the Swati
language word for flower, used to refer to the groups of women dancers.
Speaking at the
opening of an international trade fair in Swaziland’s economic center Manzini,
he promised that the affected families would be compensated, adding that
investigation into the accident was ongoing.
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