These clearly indicates where the west stood a far as electing Uhuru for president was concerned. The irony is that we have a president elected by people but not one selected by the western world. .........Mashariaz Gitonga
PHOTO | MANDEL NGAN US President Barack Obama steps off Air Force One upon arrival at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia, on May 19, 2013. Obama will go on his first African tour between June 26 and July 3. AFP
By AFPTuesday, May 21 2013
In Summary
- Itinerary of Obama's trip bypasses Kenya
- Obama will meet officials, businessmen, and civil society leaders, including young people, on the trip between June 26 and July 3 -- an unusually long journey for a president who normally dashes across timezones on trips abroad
- It would likely be seen as unseemly for Obama to appear with Uhuru Kenyatta, elected president in March, who will go on trial in July at the International Criminal Court (ICC) for crimes against humanity in post-election violence in 2007-08
WASHINGTON
President
Barack Obama will go on a first African tour next month, visiting
Senegal, Tanzania and South Africa, but his itinerary released on Monday
bypasses Kenya, an ancestral homeland.
Obama
disappointed many Africans by spending only a few hours in sub-Saharan
Africa -- in Ghana -- during his first term, but is keen to implement a
sweeping new regional strategy, prioritizing democracy and economic
reform.
Speculation will centre on whether America's
first black president will see ailing 94-year-old South African
anti-Apartheid icon Nelson Mandela, on a trip on which he will be
accompanied by First Lady Michelle Obama.
The White
House said the long-awaited visit was intended to underscore Obama's
"commitment to broadening and deepening cooperation between the United
States and the people of sub-Saharan Africa" to advance peace and
prosperity.
Obama will meet officials, businessmen, and
civil society leaders, including young people, on the trip between June
26 and July 3 -- an unusually long journey for a president who normally
dashes across timezones on trips abroad.
But early
scrutiny will concentrate as much on where he will not go in Africa, as
his planned stops, with Kenya, the land of Obama's late father, where he
still has living relatives, a glaring omission.
Obama
frequently uses his past and background to connect with foreigners,
remembering his childhood stays while in Indonesia, his Irish heritage
in Ireland, and as a Hawaii native, posing as America's "first Pacific
president."
But politics appears to have scuppered hopes for Obama to reconnect with his roots in Kenya.
It
would likely be seen as unseemly for Obama to appear with Uhuru
Kenyatta, elected president in March, who will go on trial in July at
the International Criminal Court (ICC) for crimes against humanity in
post-election violence in 2007-08.
An administration
official said on condition of anonymity that Kenyatta's election had
been a complicating factor in setting Obama's schedule in Africa.
Obama
did visit Kenya in 2006, shortly after he was elected to the Senate,
but before he announced his 2008 run for the White House.
His visit to Africa will follow a similar tour made by his wife Michelle in June 2011, during which she met Mandela.
While
the president is yet to mount a full tour of the continent, he did host
a meeting at the end of March with recently elected Senegalese
counterpart, Macky Sall, along with the leaders of Sierra Leone, Malawi
and Cape Verde, lauding them as examples of "the progress that we are
seeing in Africa."
In 2011, Obama received four other
African leaders at the White House, the presidents of Benin, Guinea,
Niger and Ivory Coast. He had promised them the US would remain a
"stalwart partner" to democracies in Africa.
In June
2012, Obama unveiled a sweeping new Africa strategy, with the goal of
reinforcing security and democracy on a continent facing the threat of
Al-Qaeda and a Chinese economic offensive.
The new US
blueprint seeks to boost trade, strengthen peace, security and good
governance and bolster democratic institutions, declaring that a
continent torn by poverty, corruption and discord could be the world's
next big economic success story.
The administration
touted "successes" from helping to restore democracy in Ivory Coast,
nurturing the new state of South Sudan, backing stability efforts in
Somalia and engaging young African leaders.
In his speech before Ghana's parliament in 2009, Obama
proclaimed that even though the continent now needs international aid,
"Africa's future is up to Africans."
Obama's visit will
also likely throw a new focus on the President's Emergency Plan for
AIDS Relief, which was the brainchild of his predecessor George W. Bush
and is credited with saving millions of lives.
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