Swazi King Mswati III has picked a 17-year-old schoolgirl as his new fiancee who will be introduced to the public as his 13th bride-to-be once she passes a HIV test...
Less than five months after picking 16-year-old Nothando Dube as his 12th bride-to-be, the 36-year-old Mswati has now chosen Colile Nosiphe Magagula, known as Titi, as his next fiancee.
She will be "unveiled" once she passes an HIV test and once she gets royal blessings from the Queen Mother Ntombi Thwala of Swaziland, where close to 40 percent of the population is living with HIV and AIDS ...The "unveiling" means that she will be officially introduced to the public as his fiancee. "There is a lady that is currently undergoing certain rituals that include an HIV test and if she passes that test she would be unveiled."
Swaziland has the world's highest per capita rate of HIV infection at 38.8 percent in the kingdom of 1.1 million people, according to UN estimates.
Mswati has 11 official wives and two fiancees, including Magagula, and 24 children. The king is apparently trying to fill vacancies left by two of his wives who left Swaziland in June this year after falling out of favour with the royal household.
Rumours in royal circles say that Dube, who was picked as his fiancee at the end August last year, has since fallen pregnant and that the king will soon marry her.
Magagula would have written her senior exams at the end of the year but has now left school to join the royal house.
Mswati, a polygamist who is know as "Ngweyama" or the lion, has ruled the mountainous kingdom wedged between South Africa and Mozambique since 1986, when he acceded to the throne at the age of 18.
Rumours in royal circles say that Dube, who was picked as his fiancee at the end August last year, has since fallen pregnant and that the king will soon marry her.
Magagula would have written her senior exams at the end of the year but has now left school to join the royal house.
Mswati, a polygamist who is know as "Ngweyama" or the lion, has ruled the mountainous kingdom wedged between South Africa and Mozambique since 1986, when he acceded to the throne at the age of 18. His father King Sobhuza II led the country to independence from Britain in 1968, and died at the age of 82 in 1982 with no fewer than 70 wives.
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