Mswati's reign has brought some changes in the government and political transformation. However, critics such as the
People's United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO) believe that these changes are solely aimed at strengthening and perpetuating the traditional order. His attendance at the May 2012 Sovereign Monarchs lunch, to celebrate the
Diamond Jubilee of
Queen Elizabeth II, caused some controversy, given criticisms of his regime's human rights record. Mswati's reign has been criticized for its several alleged human rights violations. His regime has been accused of using torture and excessive force to control the masses as well as blatant discrimination against various dissenting groups. His regime has been accused of extrajudicial killings by his forces, along with arbitrary arrests, detentions, and unwarranted searches and seizures of homes and property. His government has restricted freedom of speech, assembly and association, and has harassed activists and journalists. The government has reportedly targeted the LGBT community, labour leaders, and activists against child labour, among other groups. The courts took little or no action to punish Mswati's actions or the officials who committed the abuses. Mswati has been accused of kidnapping women he desires to marry. In addition, in 2000 he allegedly called for a parliamentary meeting to debate if HIV-positive people should be "sterilized and branded". In the 2014 national budget, parliament allocated US$61 million for the King's annual household budget, while 63% of Swazis live on less than US$1.25 per day. Mswati banned photography of his automobiles after he was criticized for purchasing luxury cars, such as a $500,000 DaimlerChrysler
Maybach 62. According to the Forbes 2009 list of the World's 15 Richest Royals, King Mswati is worth a reported US$200 million. In January 2004 the
Times of Swaziland reported that the king asked his government to spend about $15-million to redecorate three main palaces and build others for each of his thirteen wives. The Prime Minister's Office issued a press statement saying the article in the
Times of Swaziland was "reckless and untrue" and that the proposal was for the construction of 5 State Houses, not Palaces, and the cost was only €19.9 million. Later that year the go-ahead was given to build five new buildings at a cost of more than US$4 million out of
public funds. In August 2008, hundreds of Swazi women marched through the capital to protest the cost of a shopping spree taken abroad by nine of the King's thirteen wives. The demonstration was organised by Positive Living, a non-governmental organisation for Swazi women with AIDS, and protesters submitted a petition to the finance minister arguing that the money should have been differently spent.
LaMahlangu controversy According to accusations by
Amnesty International,
Zena Mahlangu, an 18-year-old high school student, disappeared from her school in October 2002. Her mother, Lindiwe Dlamini, learned that her daughter had been taken by two men, Qethuka Sgombeni Dlamini and Tulujani Sikhondze, and she reported the matter to the police. Some time later, she was told that her daughter was at
Ludzidzini Royal Village and was being prepared to be the next wife of the king. Among the criteria for a
liphovela (future bride) is that the girl must not be a twin; Zena Mahlangu was half of a brother-sister twin set, and therefore not eligible. The matter went to the High Court, but Swaziland's Attorney-General
Phesheya Dlamini intervened. ==Honours==