Princess Sikhanyiso Dlamini (Swazi:[sikʰaɲisoɮʱamini]; born 1 September 1987) is a Swazi princess and politician. She is the eldest daughter of King Mswati III of Eswatini, and is the country's former Minister of Information and Communication Technology.[1]
Early life and education
Sikhanyiso Dlamini was educated in Britain at a mixed private school, St Edmund's College, Ware, in Hertfordshire, where she was in Challoner House. She continued to study drama at Biola University in California.[2] In 2012, Princess Sikhanyiso graduated from the University of Sydney with a master's degree in digital communication. While in Australia, she resided in Glebe with her palace-appointed aide, Yemma Sholo.[3] She is the first child of Inkhosikati LaMbikiza and has more than two hundred blood-related uncles and aunts through her grandfather, King Sobhuza II, who had seventy wives and two hundred and one children. She is also one of his one thousand grandchildren in the Royal Swazi House of Dlamini.
She is the first-born of thirty children born to King Mswati III and Inkhosikati LaMbikiza. She has two hundred aunts and uncles, not including their spouses.[4]
In 2001, Mswati III instituted the umchwasho—a traditional chastity rite—in Swaziland as a means of combating the AIDS epidemic. The princess became a focus of controversy because while she was staying abroad, she was not bound by the strictures of the umchwasho.[5] While studying abroad, Princess Sikhanyiso developed a reputation for ignoring or rebelling against her native country's traditions.[6]
On 14 December 2003, a report appeared in the Times of Swaziland claiming that Princess Sikhanyiso had gone on a trip to the US and Britain, and that the Swazi government had spent close to E1 million (US$100,000) on her trip. The prime minister's office subsequently issued a press statement denying these claims.[7]
At the end of the ban in 2005, Princess Sikhanyiso, then 17 years old, celebrated with a party involving loud music and alcohol at the Queen mother's residence. As punishment for the princess's disrespect of the royal residence, during which Mswati announced his engagement to a new wife-to-be, an official overseeing traditional affairs beat Princess Sikhanyiso with a stick.[8]
The following year, the princess criticized the institution of polygamy in Swaziland, saying, "Polygamy brings all advantages in a relationship to men, and this to me is unfair and evil." The princess was subsequently "gagged" by the Royal Palace and the press was not allowed to contact her.[9]
She was featured in a 2007 documentary titled Without the King about the monarchy in Eswatini, the disparity between the royals' wealth and the widespread poverty of their subjects, and Eswatini's HIV/AIDS crisis.[10][11]
Achievements
The king supported the princess with her launch of the Imbali Foundation in April 2014.[12] The foundation focuses on the health, education, and spirituality of Imbali YemaSwati (the regiment of Swazi maidens headed by the Inkhosatana or chief maiden). The princess runs the beauty pageant Miss Swaziland Tourism.[13] The Swaziland Deaf Association requested her patronage for Miss Deaf Africa and received the government's support.[14]
The princess is an aspiring actress and rapper and is commonly known as "Pashu" in Eswatini.[15][16] During her brief stay in Malaysia for an internship program at Limkokwing University, she recorded a single titled "Hail Your Majesty" in honour of her father, the king. The debut of the tribute song received a standing ovation at Limkokwing during the conferment of an honorary doctorate to King Mswati III on 4 July 2013.[17]
The princess is a member of the board of directors of MTN Swaziland, a multinational mobile telecommunications company.[18] She has appointed a businessman from Malaysia, the director of MyStartBiz Sdn Bhd, Muhammad Qadeer, as her special envoy for investment promotion in the Kingdom of Swaziland.[19]