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Swaziland King Mswati 'left by another of his wives'

Angela "LaGija" Dlamini, the sixth wife of Swaziland's King Mswati III, has left the royal palace, citing years of abuse, according to a report.
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Swaziland's King Mswati III, pictured here in 2008, is one of the world's richest royals. (Paballo Thekiso/AFP/Getty Images)
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — The sixth wife of Swaziland's polygamous King Mswati III has left him, according to a report.
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Swaziland King Mswati III receives luxury jet from 'sponsors'

Government spokesperson Percy Simelane said the DC-9 twin-engine aircraft is for the use of the king and his 13 wives, and denied allegations by Swaziland’s banned opposition party that taxpayer cash must have been used to buy it.

Swaziland protests: Police arrest union leaders in crackdown on pro-democracy marches

JOHANNESBURG — Swaziland police cracked down on pro-democracy protests Thursday, arresting union leaders and stepping up armed patrols to disperse planned gatherings in the capital, Mbabane.

Swaziland king demands cows for his birthday

Swazi king has ordered the subjects of his tiny, impoverished country to donate cows for his birthday celebrations.
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Swaziland's King Mswati III, pictured here in 2008, is one of the world's richest royals. He has ordered the people of his tiny, impoverished country to give him cows for his birthday. (Paballo Thekiso/AFP/Getty Images)

JOHANNESBURG — Swaziland's King Mswati III is celebrating a birthday this month, and he has ordered up some gifts from the subjects of his impoverished mountain kingdom: cows to be slaughtered for the celebrations.

Mswati, Africa's last absolute monarch and one of the world's richest royals, has demanded that chiefs from Swaziland's Shiselweni region, where his 44th birthday party is to be held, canvas their subjects for cattle, Agence France-Presse reported

The order comes at a time of continuing economic crisis in the landlocked southern African country, where two-thirds of the 1.4 million population live on less than $1 a day.

While ordinary Swazis are suffering, Mswati, his 13 wives and sprawling family have apparently remained unscathed by the government’s severe budget shortfall.  

More from GlobalPost: Swaziland: King Mswati challenged by economic crisis

Prince Gcokoma, the home affairs minister, said the country's dire financial situation means the government doesn't have enough money in the budget to pay for the event to mark Mswati's April 19 birthday, although it will be contributing about $650,000 from the public coffers.

"Chiefs from the Shiselweni, as hosts, are expected to provide cattle to be slaughtered on the day," Gcokoma told AFP.

Last year, birthday celebrations were canceled because of Swaziland's financial crisis, "a decision that was applauded by many," the Swazi Observer noted.

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Swaziland to ban Twitter, Facebook posts critical of King Mswati III

JOHANNESBURG — Swaziland plans to make it illegal to criticize King Mswati III on Facebook and Twitter, in an apparent attempt to curb criticism of the king after a year in which he faced unprecedented protests stoked by the country's economic crisis.

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MANZINI — Swaziland King Mswati III is confronted with a crippling economic crisis and growing dissent in his tiny mountain kingdom in southern Africa.  

Swaziland angry with King Mswati and his 13 wives (VIDEO)

GlobalPost editor Andrew Meldrum wrote in August that King Mswati, Africa's last absolute monarch, bought a $500,000 Mercedes Maybach limousine in 2005 and new BMWs for each of his wives. Meanwhile, each wife already has her own palace.

From Swaziland to Papua to Georgia, here are the world's forgotten revolutions

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