Sunday, 30 June 2013
Widow finally speaks on American tragedy that tore young family apart
Saturday, 29 June 2013
Asians and Africans Will Have to Pay £3,000 'Cash Bond' to Enter UK
The second wave of apartheid combined with racism and segregation introduced by the Cameroon government. The face of whit supremacist unveiled! the notorious saying comes into effect......If you are white, no problem. if you are brown, you can stay, if you are black, pack and go!
The scheme, beginning in November, will target visitors from seven countries as part of a drive to bring down immigration and curb abuses of the system.
Visitors will forfeit the bond if they fail to leave the country by the time their visa has expired.
The controversial move to introduce the Australian-style system comes as the Conservatives face a growing threat from Ukip, whose message about the impact of migrants on jobs and public spending appears to have struck a chord with the public.
Fate closes door for Obama meeting with his personal hero Mandela
- The issue was forefront in the minds of the journalists travelling with him. Before boarding Air Force One in Senegal for South Africa, Mr Obama said: “I don’t need a photo op, and the last thing I want to do is to be in any way intrusive at a time when the family is concerned with Nelson Mandela’s condition.
- A global icon,
Nobel peace prize laureate, moral beacon, first post-apartheid South African president, a man of great forbearing and fortitude, an orator, alawyer , a man of the people, fondly called Madiba by South Africans or just tata (father) by his children and those who see him as a towering father, Mr Mandela is no ordinary mortal. - He was also trying to connect to Malcom X, a Muslim preacher and peer of Dr King and who was pursuing the same cause in different ways, and who was also gunned down in 1965.
Dar a no-go zone for residents ahead of visit by US President
Saturday, June 29 201
- Mr Obama, who is making his first major tour of the continent since his re-election to the White House in 2012, is accompanied by a large delegation comprising 400 State officials, 200 chief executives of American companies, 100 journalists and a 200-member presidential security team.
Former Prime Minister Raila Odinga speaks on President Uhuru Kenyatta and future in politics
Why is Africa poor? Why are Kibaki and Moi rich?
By Tee Ngugi, Saturday, June 22 2013
- The fact of the matter is that Africa is poor because our national efforts are geared towards sustaining the megalomania of our leaders — retired or active.
Raila: Jubilee won’t force me to quit politics
Saturday, June 29 2013
- The disputes Mr Odinga has engaged in with the authorities and the repeated security breaches at his offices have raised questions about the maturity of the nation’s democratic culture.
- Secretary to the Cabinet Francis Kimemia declined to comment and asked that all inquiries be directed to Inspector-General of Police David Kimaiyo. When Mr Kimaiyo was reached, he said he was in meetings and could not discuss the issue.
- On speculation that some within government have been pushing him to retire so that they can inherit his political base, Mr Odinga said that his best advice to anyone seeking to win over the ODM base would be to deliver on their pledges to Kenyans rather than trying to force Cord leaders to exit the scene.
Obama’s new pledge to visit Kenya before leaving White House
- Mr Obama said he avoided Kenya during his current tour because of ICC cases facing President Kenyatta and his deputy William Ruto. The two are facing crimes against humanity charges stemming from the 2007/08 post-election violence.
- President Obama threw a jab at China’s operations in Africa, claiming some of its business deals on the continent are not benefiting Africans.
Newly minted billionaires in Kenya revealed
Seyi, 35, was just 17 when she became dependent on sleeping with men.By 19 she'd had 40 partners and she says she has bedded a shockingtotal of 370 men
And this was not a chance encounter, for Seyi was a sex addict and it was what she did almost every day for 13 years. Last night she said: “Sex addiction took hold of my life.”
Thursday, 27 June 2013
US immigration reform bill passes Senate in rare breakthrough
Wednesday, 26 June 2013
Seven Kenyan universities ranked among Africa’s best 100
The Times Higher Education World University has released its 2012-2013 universities and colleges rankings and Kenyan universities are prominently featuring. The list features University of Nairobi as the top ranked in Kenya and 17th in Africa. Strathmore University and JKUAT follow at 44 and 56 respectively. Kenyatta University is at 61 USIU (77), Egerton (80), and Moi University (85).
The top university in the world is California State University in US, followed by Stanford University and Oxford University in UK.
The top university in Africa is the University of Cape Town followed by University of Witwatersrand and Stellenbosch University all in South Africa.
The Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2012-2013 is powered by Thomson Reuters and is the only global university performance tables to judge world class universities across all of their core missions – teaching, research, knowledge transfer and international outlook. The top universities rankings employ 13 carefully calibrated performance indicators to provide the most comprehensive and balanced comparisons available, which are trusted by students, academics, university leaders, industry and governments.
Complete rankings:
1 University of Cape Town South Africa
2 University of South Africa South Africa
3 University of Pretoria South Africa
4 Universiteit Stellenbosch South Africa
5 University of the Witwatersrand South Africa
6 University of Dar es Salaam Tanzania
7 Cairo University Egypt
8 University of KwaZulu-Natal South Africa
9 The American University in Cairo Egypt
10 Makerere University Uganda
11 Rhodes University South Africa
12 University of the Western Cape South Africa
13 Mansoura University Egypt
14 University of Johannesburg South Africa
15 Université Cheikh Anta Diop Senegal
16 Assiut University Egypt
17 University of Nairobi Kenya
18 Zagazig University Egypt
19 University of Botswana Botswana
20 Université Mohammed V – Agdal Morocco
21 University of Ghana Ghana
22 Universiteit van die Vrystaat South Africa
23 University of Ibadan Nigeria
24 Addis Ababa University Ethiopia
25 North-West University South Africa
26 Alexandria University Egypt
27 Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University South Africa
28 University of Zambia Zambia
29 Université des Sciences et de la Technologie
Houari Boumediène Algeria
30 The German University in Cairo Egypt
31 Obafemi Awolowo University Nigeria
32 Universidade Eduardo Mondlane Mozambique
33 University of Mauritius Mauritius
34 Ain Shams University Egypt
35 University of Lagos Nigeria
36 Tanta University Egypt
37 Université de Ouagadougou Burkina Faso
38 Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and
Technology Ghana
39 Université de la Reunion Reunion
40 Université Nationale du Rwanda Rwanda
41 Helwan University Egypt
42 Cape Peninsula University of Technology South Africa
43 University of Zululand South Africa
44 Strathmore University Kenya
45 Université Cadi Ayyad Morocco
46 Al Akhawayn University Morocco
47 Université d’Alger Algeria
48 Université Mentouri de Constantine Algeria
49 Université Badji Mokhtar de Annaba Algeria
50 Université d’Oran Algeria
51 Université Hassan II – Casablanca Morocco
52 University of Fort Hare South Africa
53 Université Abdelmalek Essadi Morocco
54 Ahmadu Bello University Nigeria
55 Jaamacada Muqdisho Somalia
56 Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and
Technology Kenya
57 University of Swaziland Swaziland
58 University of Ilorin Nigeria
59 Sudan University of Science and Technology – Sudan
60 Université Mohammed V – Souissi Morocco
61 Kenyatta University Kenya
62 University of Khartoum Sudan
63 University of Namibia Namibia
64 Université de Batna Algeria
65 University of Malawi Malawi
66 Benha University Egypt
67 Université Hassan II – Mohammedia Morocco
68 Al-Azhar University Egypt
69 Fayoum University Egypt
70 Université de la Manouba Tunisia
71 University of Benin Nigeria
72 Minoufiya University Egypt
73 Durban University of Technology South Africa
74 Université de Tunis El Manar Tunisia
75 Université de Carthage Tunisia
76 Tshwane University of Technology South Africa
77 United States International University Kenya
78 Université Abou Bekr Belkaid Tlemcen Algeria
79 Polytechnic of Namibia Namibia
80 Egerton University Kenya
81 Université de Gabès Tunisia
82 Université de Sousse Tunisia
83 Université d’Antananarivo Madagascar
84 Minia University Egypt
85 Moi University Kenya
86 Université de Nouakchott Mauritania
87 Université Mouloud Maameri de Tizi Ouzou – Algeria
88 University of Venda South Africa
89 Central University of Technology South Africa
90 Université Ibn Tofail Morocco
91 University of Zimbabwe Zimbabwe
92 Suez Canal University Egypt
93 University of Cape Coast Ghana
94 Misr International University Egypt
95 University of Jos Nigeria
96 University of Maiduguri Nigeria
97 University of Limpopo South Africa
98 The Hubert Kairuki Memorial University – Tanzania
99 Jimma University Ethiopia
100 Modern Sciences and Arts Uni, Egypt
Tuesday, 25 June 2013
Businessman Chris Kirubi snubs invite to meet Obama
by Capital FM
Kenyan Businessman Chris Kirubi is among top regional investors invited to meet US President Barack Obama during tour of Tanzania next week.
Kirubi who is also the Chairman of Capital Group Limited has been invited to be part of the business audience for the US President at the Hyatt Regency in Dar es Salaam on Monday.
However, the astute businessman said he may turn down the invitation owing to the fact that Obama has once again snubbed Kenya in his three-nation African tour.
Kirubi posted on his Facebook page: “After reflecting hard on the invitation by the organisers of Barack Obama’s visit to Africa by passing Kenya, I’m just wondering if I’m any more special than all the other Kenyans. I seriously feel like I can only do what he has done to Kenya.”
He was basing his comments on widespread uproar by Kenyans who were unhappy that Obama was sidestepping Kenya – the homeland of his late father – and going to neighbouring Tanzania, Senegal and South Africa.
“Should I not skip the invitation in solidarity with all Kenyans who have been ignored on his trip to Africa and more so to his ancestral home? Does it make sense going to meet him in other people’s country? I am very proud to be Kenyan and hopefully one day, Barack Obama will also be very proud to have Kenyan roots in his blood,” Kirubi’s Facebook post read.
Stephen Hayes, the President and CEO of Corporate Council on Africa who sent out the invite says Obama will give remarks on trade and investment between the United States and Africa and will also speak on East Africa business relations.
The business audience will be limited to specific regional business leaders.
Before the address, the president will have a closed meeting with about 25 carefully selected American and African CEOs.
Obama leaves Washington on Wednesday June 26, on the first leg of a three nation tour meant to emphasize economic potential and democratic development, in east, south and western sub Saharan Africa.
He will stop first in Senegal, where he will meet President Macky Sall and pay an emotive visit to Goree Island and a museum and memorial to Africans caught up in the slave trade.
Then he will move onto Johannesburg, South Africa on Sunday 30 and the next day in Pretoria to hold talks and a press conference with President Jacob Zuma.
Obama will stay overnight in Johannesburg and Cape Town during his trip, and plans to visit Robben Island, where Mandela was once imprisoned.
The final leg of Obama’s journey will take him to Tanzania, where his program includes talks and a press conference with President Jakaya Kikwete and a visit to the Ubungo power plant.
Obama will also lay a wreath at a memorial to 11 people killed in the US embassy bombing in 1998.
The US president was eagerly expected to visit Kenya but the White House has now explained that the ICC cases facing Kenya’s top leaders are the reason why he will skipping the homeland of his late father.
“Hungry & Homeless”Kenyan in Diaspora-Papers or no papers,Tupendane
June 24, 2013 |
Being away from our own country, our own people, and our own families in a foreign country can be very difficult. It is really tormenting when one has no papers that allow them to reside and work in this country. As a result, some people not being equipped with the right information have resorted to hiding from fellow Kenyans. Some have put up walls in their lives that will only take the hand of God to penetrate. Many of us Kenyans in the Diaspora do not have information that can help us live in our adopted homes. We shy away from the unknown, thinking if we went to look for help we might be arrested and deported. So we have fallen victims of numbing our pains and struggles, either with over –the-counter-medication, prescribed medications, illegal drugs or alcohol. We have people in our community struggling with feeding themselves while there are organizations that offer free food, with no questions asked. We have lawyers from not-for profit organizations including Catholic charities that can sit down with you and suggest practical solutions to your illegal status, yet many of us are bogged down with worries about our legal issues.
Why am writing on this? Because I have a passion to help and I cannot do it alone or the few of us who have a similar passion and burden for our less fortunate Kenyans in the Diaspora cannot do it alone; it needs a whole community. We have divided ourselves especially here in the United States into four categories. One category is those who have papers, they rarely want to associate with those who do not. The other category is those who went to school and have professional jobs. These tend to look down upon those who have no professional jobs. At times we even look at the others and treat them as lesser than us just because their profession does not bring in a large income like the other person. The third category is of those who have gone through relationship struggles and are divorced; they keep their own company. Those who are married have their own company and keep to themselves not wanting to mix. It gets worse. Some people do not mix with others just because of the city they live in; makubwa hayo!
The fourth category is the Christian communities; we have our own circles, so we take care of our own in the Christian community. The fact that some of us have papers does not mean we are immune to problems that will require the specific help of fellow Kenyans. The fact that you have money does not mean you do not need fellow Kenyans. Whether you are in want now or not there will come a time when you will need your own people. Remember we will always reap what we sow. Let us be careful to sow seeds of compassion, let us not judge our fellow Kenyans, because we have not walked in their shoe.
Another issue is when others are in need in the community. I have had people respond by telling me “Isabella simjui huyu mtu, we do not see this person in other peoples’ functions, they do not come to help others so they need to learn a lesson from us not going to help”. Give me a break, again you are judging. We need to understand why people do not show up in places. Some of us have wounds, some of us think we think no one loves us or cares, and some of us are running away from hidden pains that make us fragile and uncomfortable in social places. As a result we feel safe in our own little worlds where there is no noise. The question is does really anyone in pain or grieving the death of a loved one or being deported learn a lesson by you not supporting them or helping them? No it does not! I had an incident where someone wanted to punish a fellow Kenyan who had died by saying he never showed up at other peoples’ events. I responded by saying, “this guy is dead, so right now we are not talking about what he did not do while he was a live , lets talk about the need at hand , what we need to do”. Honestly, in most cases all we need to do is to begin from where we are and with the situation at hand without trying to punish people. You will be amazed that the people we blame and judge of not appearing in social events are just hurting people, even when they do not look like, smell like or act like it. This is because they have learnt the art of faking it to survive.
How does this matter to you and me reading this article? You are your brother’s or sister’s keeper. True satisfaction is found in helping those who do not deserve it, those who are looked down upon, and those who have never helped you. It includes those who were in position to help and did not, those who did not show up when you needed them, those who refused to give you a ride, and those who refused to house you. If you find them homeless in their season of reaping please help them. This will be a rude awakening to them than treating them the same way they treated you.
We all have fallen short of what God expects from us in regards to treating our fellow humans, but we cannot continue that way any longer. We can repent and start anew, me included. Please open your eyes to the need that is around you. It might not be only a Kenyan, but we need to start in Jerusalem, we begin at home.
If you are reading this article and you are going through something that keeps you away from other Kenyans please contact us, if we do not have the answer we will point you to someone who can.
The easiest way to contact anyone in the within the united states is through the diaspora massager, you can email them or call Isaac Kariuki with any questions or concerns , he will direct you to the proper resources. Most states have Kenyan organization that have regular meetings, please join them; for example in Northern California we have one called “Harambee” so please try to hook up with your fellow Kenyans its fun being together.
If you have ideas about what you have seen and experienced please write back to me. Together we can put our efforts to fight for our people who are struggling.
Till next week, it is your Diaspora friend, evangelist Isabella Mwango of www.vesselforhonor.org. or call 408-833-6456 remember we are in PST.
Monday, 24 June 2013
Political Leaders Beyond The Mythical: The Luo Beyond Raila
Nelson Mandela: Anti-apartheid icon's family gathers around his hospital bed as the world fears the worst
"Former president Mandela remains in a critical condition in hospital," Mr Zuma said in a televised address to South Africans.
Mr Mandela, the hero of black South Africans' battle for freedom during 27 years in apartheid jails, was rushed to hospital on June 8 with a recurring lung infection.
Despite intensive treatment at Pretoria's Mediclinic Heart Hospital, the 94-year-old's condition appears to have dramatically deteriorated.
Nigerian Chinedu: We Are Helping Kenya By Marrying Their Women
Kenyan men can never make a grave mistake and marry a Nija. Who want to be eating fufu mixed with all sorts of meat?
Darcis sends Nadal crashing
The world No 135 played the match of his career to become the first player to oust the two-time Wimbledon champion in the first round of a Grand Slam event.
Racism in Kenya? How can kettle call pot black? Yawa
I hate ASIANS with a PASSION – MUTHAMA again after MUTUA named an Asian in his Cabinet
Rich families in fear of shame as drugs consume their children
NAIROBI, KENYA: Vicky Kones recalls the darkest day in her life; when she met her father in the streets of a town in the United States of America. After years of alcohol and drug addiction, Vicky was not the daughter her parents had known. So when they met, her father posed the question: “What happened?”
“The hurt in his face was just too much,” recalls Vicky. “My father was normally a jovial man, but that day he was crushed inside when he saw how I had turned out.”
Uhuru Kenyatta heads to the East as US President Barack Obama jets in Africa
June 23rd 2013, By Geoffrey MosokuNairobi, Kenya: President Uhuru Kenyatta kicks off a three-week tour of Eastern Europe and Asia in what is described as seeking to strengthen trade and economic ties with the East.
Uhuru is slated to leave Nairobi this week to
In what appears as an act to counter US President Barack Obama’s snub of his fatherland on his second tour to the continent, President Uhuru’s trip is calculated to take him to China, on the days that Obama will be in the next-door neighbourhood of Tanzania.
Men who swing it both ways
June 23rd 2013, By CATE MUKEI and SHIRLEY GENGA
Women these days not only worry that their man could be cheating on them, but that he could be cheating on them with another man.
Belinda, a lawyer who refused to give her second name for personal reasons, knows this only too well. It took five years before she found out that her husband had a string of male lovers.
When they first met, he claimed to work for a certain international cosmetic company that had a branch in Kenya. She believed him because he gave her no reason to suspect otherwise. In fact, when she began hearing whispers from friends that her husband was cheating on her, she ignored them.
But three years and a daughter later, Belinda began to feel that something was not right. Her husband seemed to spend far too much time at work, or with his male friends.
Undercover cop told to dig "dirt" on murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence's family
Stephen Lawrence |
Whistleblower Peter Francis said he took part in the operation to attack the reputations of Stephen’s parents, Doreen and Neville, a friend who witnessed the stabbing and campaigners, who pressured the police to bring the racist killers to justice.
Mr Francis said Met bosses wanted him to find information that could be used against them shortly after 18-year-old Stephen’s killing in April 1993 on a street in Eltham, South East London.
Shocked Doreen said last night: “Out of all the things I’ve found out over the years, this certainly has topped it.
Why Raila Odinga team lost March poll to Uhuru Kenyatta, William Ruto
June 24th 2013 Key backers of former Prime Minister Raila Odinga have revealed that he lost last presidential election due to internal wrangles, supremacy wars and indiscipline within his party.
Details are also emerging on how outgoing MPs and seniorparty officials in his Orange Democratic
Unknown to Raila, who was on the campaign trail chasing after a victory that he had realistic chances of grasping, his top aides, outgoing ODM MPs and senior party officials who ran his campaign secretariat spent most of their time fighting for personal interests.
Sunday, 23 June 2013
"The condition of former president Nelson Mandela, who is still in hospital in Pretoria, has become critical," Mac Maharaj, presidential spokesman, said in a statement.
The condition of 94-year-old who entered the hospital on June 8 was said to have deteriorated over the weekend.
President Jacob Zuma broke the news after visiting Mandela Sunday evening and was told by doctors "that the former president's condition had become critical over the past 24 hours."
Mandela, who became South Africa's first black president in 1994, is due to celebrate his 95th birthday on July 18.
When Kenyans in the Diaspora are not too sure about where ‘home’ is
RUTO FACES REBELLION IN OFFICE
A Tale Of Two Jomo Kenyattas And Two Raila Odingas
Saturday, 22 June 2013
Could Jubilee be trying to clip Former Prime Minister Raila’s wings and force him out of politics
June 22nd 2013, By Oscar ObonyoNAIROBI, KENYA: Three months after exiting from power, anxiety is brewing over former Prime Minister Raila Odinga.
His rivals are warning that his forces are regrouping and should be checked, while his backers are protesting over an alleged grand scheme to politically vanquish the Coalition for Reforms and Democracy ( CORD) leader.
Though out of the picture, pundits have — rightly or wrongly — attributed the current friction between the Senate and the Executive to the former premier. The situation is not helped by the fact that Raila is credited with constitutional reforms and that he campaigned spiritedly for a devolved system of Government.
This factor has left Jubilee Government insiders restless, with fears the current stalemate may be earning Raila political mileage and painting President Uhuru and his deputy William Ruto as being half-hearted in the push for reforms. But this week Uhuru hosted all 47 governors and reassured them of his commitment to devolution.
Sisters who control Sh400b sector
June 22nd 2013, By Nicholas Waitathu and Kenneth KwamaNAIROBI, KENYA:
But that is not how the former Managing Director at Tea Board of Kenya (TBK) Cecily Kariuki and her elder sister, Loise Njeru, MD at
“Our father was very humble and particular and always referred to us as his ‘boys’. He didn’t discriminate, but gave all his children an equal chance at life,” explained Njeru during an interview in her office.
The story of the two sisters and how they were practically programmed to become leaders is a rarity that mirrors soap-opera-like drama. But that was before the younger sister, Cecily climbed a notch higher to the position of Principal Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture.
Top 10 Richest Countries
1. Qatar: GDP of $88,222
Qatar has flourished alot in the last few years with sustained elevated authentic GDP growth in 2011. Qatari establishment throughout the monetary crisis wanted to protect the local banking sector with direct investments into domestic banks. GDP rebounded in 2010 largely due to the augmentation in oil prices and 2011′s growth was supported by Qatar’s investment in expanding its gas sector. Qatar’s proved reserves of natural gas exceed 25 trillion cubic meters, more than 13% of the world total and third largest in the world.ICC cases reason for Kenya snub – Obama aide
Capital FM News
White House has now explained that the ICC cases facing Kenya’s top leaders are the reason why US President Barrack Obama is skipping the homeland of his late father during his Africa tour which kicks off next week.
White House officials said that “uncertainty following Kenya’s elections earlier this year and the fact that Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta [and his deputy William Ruto] is facing trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague” for allegedly orchestrating deadly violence in 2007-8 following previous polls had nixed a possible visit.
Ben Rhodes, a deputy US national security advisor said that “It just wasn’t the best time for the president to travel to Kenya at this point”.
Speaking from Washington on Friday night during a teleconference mainly centered on the Africa visit starting Wednesday next week, Rodes however, insisted that Kenya retains a “special place” in the president’s heart.
Obama leaves Washington on Wednesday on the first leg of a three nation tour meant to emphasise economic potential and democratic development, in east, south and western sub Saharan Africa.
He will stop first in Senegal, where he will meet President Macky Sall and pay an emotive visit to Goree Island and a museum and memorial to Africans caught up in the slave trade.
Then he will move onto Johannesburg, South Africa on Sunday and the next day in Pretoria to hold talks and a press conference with President Jacob Zuma.
Obama will stay overnight in Johannesburg and Cape Town during his trip, and plans to visit Robben Island, where Mandela was once imprisoned.
The final leg of Obama’s journey will take him to Tanzania, where his program includes talks and a press conference with President Jakaya Kikwete and a visit to the Ubungo power plant.
Obama will also lay a wreath at a memorial to 11 people killed in the US embassy bombing in 1998.
The US President will defer to Nelson Mandela’s family on whether he will visit the ailing anti-apartheid icon during the trip to South Africa, the top aide said.
The possibility of a meeting between the first black presidents of both South Africa and the United States has been hotly anticipated for years.
But the declining health of Mandela, 94, who has been fighting a lung infection, and Obama’s failure to visit South Africa until his second term, have left the prospect in doubt.
“We … are going to be very deferential to the Mandela family in terms of any interaction the president may have with the Mandela family or Nelson Mandela,” Rhodes said.
“Ultimately, we want whatever is in the best interests of his health and the peace of mind of the Mandela family,” said Rhodes.
“We will be in touch with them. If he has an opportunity to see the family in some capacity, that’s certainly something that we may do.”
Mandela has spent 14 days in a Pretoria hospital, where he has been in a serious condition with a lung infection.
Former South African president Thabo Mbeki said Thursday that Mandela’s health is improving, and that he is not going to “die tomorrow” despite a growing acceptance in his nation of his mortality.
Obama will stay overnight in Johannesburg and Cape Town during his trip, and plans to visit Robben Island, where Mandela was once imprisoned.
Rhodes said that Obama’s visit to the island, where Mandela spent 18 of his 27 years in prison, would be an “important and powerful symbol” of the president’s respect for Mandela, one of his personal heroes.
Obama met Mandela soon after he was elected a senator in 2005, when the former South African president was in Washington.
The two have spoken several times since on the telephone.
Obama’s wife, Michelle, was able to pay a visit to the anti-apartheid icon during her trip to Africa two years ago, and she said it was the most moving moment of her visit.