Obama: Africa Inseparable from the World
President Met with Crush of Excitement in Visit to Ghana; Praises Nation's Democratic Tradition
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A group of Nigerian Biafrans living in Ghana sing and march as they await the arrival of President Obama in Accra, Ghana on Friday, July 10, 2009. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
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President Barack Obama does a pass and review of members of the Ghanaian military at the Presidential Palace in Accra, Saturday, July 11, 2009. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)
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President Barack Obama walks with Ghana's President John Atta Mills at the Presidential Palace in Accra, Ghana, Saturday, July 11, 2009. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)
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Photo Essay Obama In Italy President Obama arrived in Italy to attend the G8 summit
Mr. Obama said events in Africa do not lose their effects at the continent's borders, and said Africa is a fully-integrated part of the global economy.
"What happens here has an impact everywhere," Mr. Obama said during a meeting with Ghanaian President John Atta Mills.
Mr. Obama scheduled a 21-hour visit to the West African nation to highlight that country's democratic tradition and engagement with the West.
During his first visit to sub-Saharan Africa since taking office, Mr. Obama sought to lift up the continent of his ancestors - while keeping its emotions in check.
Greeted by a rush of excitement on his arrival here, the United States' first black president planned a speech to Ghana's Parliament on Saturday outlining his hope for a future Africa prospering in democracy. He was also visiting a hospital and a one-time slave trading post, joined by his wife, Michelle, a great-great granddaughter of slaves.
But his speech was also pitched as a sobering account of Africa's enduring afflictions: hunger, disease, corruption, ethnic strife and strongman rule.
No big public event was planned - in part for fear it could cause a celebratory stampede, as a 1998 stop by President Bill Clinton almost did.
"All Ghanaians want to see you," Mills said, underscoring the U.S. first family's popularity that gave them Page One billing in many of the nation's newspapers.
CBS News senior White House correspondent Bill Plante, who is traveling with the president, said that Ghanans are experiencing what may best be described as Obamamania.
"It's a plus to the nation that of all the countries in Africa he decided to choose Ghana," said one man.
People lined the streets Saturday morning, many waving at every vehicle of Mr. Obama's motorcade as it headed toward a meeting at Osu Castle, the storied coastline presidential state house. One woman emerged from a coffee shop to wave a tiny U.S. flag while others sold posters and T-shirts with President Obama's picture. Many billboards lined the roads, including one that showed the president and his wife with the greeting, "Ghana loves you."

While the people of Ghana may be in a frenzy over Mr. Obama's visit, the president started his day with typical calm. Wearing a gray T-shirt and gym pants, he walked through the lobby of his hotel virtually unnoticed at 7:30 a.m. local time on his way to the downstairs gym for a morning workout.
A short time later, his motorcade left the hotel, passed under hovering military helicopters and arrived for a delayed welcome ceremony. Mills greeted his counterpart and then the pair went inside for one-on-one meetings.
Selecting Ghana as the starting point of his black Africa travels, the president sought to highlight a continental success story.
"We think that Ghana can be an extraordinary model for success throughout the continent," Mr. Obama told Atta before joining about 350 people for an outdoor breakfast at the castle.
President Obama planned to highlight those succeeded during a midday speech, urging Africans to embrace a future of accountable leaders and open markets. To ensure a wide audience, the administration organized watch parties at embassies and cultural centers across Africa.
But the speech was also a splash of cold water for Africans still nursing grievances over colonial rule.
"For many years we've made excuses about corruption or poor governance, (insisting) this was somehow the consequence of neocolonialism, or the West has been oppressive, or racism," he told AllAfrica.com last week. "I'm not a believer in excuses."
Those sentiments led Mr. Obama to avoid his father's native Kenya for this stop. Tensions in Kenya remain high after a disputed 2007 election and subsequent ethnic bloodshed.
Later in the day, Mr. Obama planned to tour Gold Coast Castle, a seaside fortress converted to the slave trade by the British in the 17th century. In its dungeons, thousands of shackled Africans huddled in squalor before being herded onto ships bound for America.
While Michelle Obama's great-great grandfather was a slave in South Carolina, his African origins are not known.
The castle visit mirrored ones paid by Clinton and George W. Bush to the slave-trading post of Goree Island, Senegal - with the added impact of Obama's mixed-race background and history-making election.
In Ghana, too, President Obama followed in Clinton's footsteps. In 1998, a surging crowd cheered Clinton in Accra's Independence Square and toppled barricades after his speech. Clinton shouted, "Back up! Back up!", his Secret Service detail clearly frantic.
President Bush's reception last year was less tumultuous, but equally warm. At a welcoming banquet, then-President John Kufuor noted huge increases in U.S. development aid and AIDS relief - and named a highway after Bush. Earlier, Mr. Bush hosted Kufuor at one of his few White House state dinners.
Mr. Obama on Saturday, however, said previous U.S. leaders' trips to the continent were weeklong tours but seldom integrated into their global travel. Mr. Obama said he wants to take an approach that shows Africa's ties to international policies.
President Obama - son of a Kenyan father and white mother from Kansas - first toured Africa in 1992. The newly-minted Harvard law school grad savored its sights, sounds and tastes. In "Dreams from My Father," he recalled running his hand over his father's burial plot. "I had sat at my father's grave and spoken to him through Africa's red soil," he wrote.
Mr. Obama flew to Ghana after the G-8 summit in L'Aquila, Italy, approved a new $20 billion food security plan. It aims to help poor nations in Africa and elsewhere avert mass starvation during the global recession.
He also had a cordial first meeting with Pope Benedict XVI. In their half-hour private audience at the Vatican, the two reviewed Mideast peace and anti-poverty efforts, aides reported. They also discussed abortion and stem cell research at length, Benedict giving him a treatise on bioethics to read while flying here, the White House said.
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- With unemployment rising to 10%, and americans outraged at obama running up trillions in debt, it only makes sense that obama is spending as much time outside washington as possible in an effort to run from his own plunging polls.
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- "Obama: Africa Inseparable from the World
This headline almost makes it sound like Barry was thinking of sending the whole of Africa into space. - Reply to this comment
- Well, we knew this was coming. Set aside a few trillion for "aid". After that it'll be a few trillion for the Arctic seals.
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- What a way to cap his misadventure in Moscow.
This summit achieved little other than some embarrassment.
http://pacificgatepost.blogspot.com/2009/07/obamas-russian-misadventure.html
Africa provided a little adulation to make up for Putin. - Reply to this comment
- Why can't we just ship his teleprompter and save all these needless travel expenses?
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- Thank you Mr. President. You have done more good in five months than was done in the previous eight years. Good luck with your continued efforts to clean up the toxic mess left by the Bush/Cheney crime cartel. Please keep in mind that all of the negative noise we hear is coming from a small, but loud-mouthed group of uneducated lemmings who cannot think for themselves. Please ignore them and forge ahead. Most of understand that you are using your popularity to help bring the world to a better place. I commend you, sir.
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- gobama
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- You will not shut us up, we love Obama! Go Obama! lol
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- @darthcheney-sorry-you wil not change our minds, we love Obama-Bush started this crap, and you will NOT change our minds on this. Try other websites, but once again, we love Obama, and back him 100% AND you will NOT change our minds-so go to H*&^%$&*
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- @wisewidget-noone, except you- thinks he is on vacation-he is working it hard, and we really appreciate opening dialogue with the rest of the world. In case you didn't notice, we do not live on the planet alone, and he is one president (unlike the last) who we really appreciate is starting to talk to the rest of the world! Good job, Obama! P.S. wisewidget, his popularity is still up-some of us back him 100% and none of you will change our minds! lol
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Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror.




