Monday, July 1, 2013

Obama’s portrait decorates the lamp posts throughout the city, along with the Swahili greeting "Karibu Tanzania."

“Obamamania” - that’s the headline of Tanzania’s Citizen newspaper Monday as the country welcomes the arrival of the U.S. president.

"Obama to meet George W. Bush in Tanzania on Tuesday" image
Women wearing skirts adorned with the face of US President Barack Obama rehearse a song to welcome him ahead of his planned meeting with Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete, outside State House in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on Monday.
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U.S. President Barack Obama greets Tanzanians at an official arrival ceremony in Dar Es Salaam July 1, 2013. REUTERS/Gary Cameron
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U.S. President Barack Obama (L) shakes hands and greets Tanzanians during an official arrival ceremony hosted by Tanzania President Jakaya Kikwete and First lady Salma Kikwete (not seen) in Dar Es Salaam July 1, 2013. REUTERS/Gary Cameron
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U.S. President Barack Obama is surrounded by Tanzanian and United States flags while greeting people at an official arrival ceremony in Dar Es Salaam July 1, 2013. REUTERS/Gary Cameron
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Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete (R) and US President Barack Obama hold a press conference following meetings at the State House in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania, on July 1, 2013. Obama arrived in Tanzania Monday after paying homage in South Africa to his ailing idol Nelson Mandela, for the final leg of his three-nation Africa tour
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US President Barack Obama (L) dances to music alongside Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete upon arrival on Air Force One at Julius Nyerere International Airport in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania, July 1, 2013.
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A billboard with the portraits of President Barack Obama and Tanzania's President Jakaya Kikwete, right, hangs above a main street in capital Dar es Salaam. The Swahili word "Karibu" reads as "Welcome".
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A billboard with the portraits of President Barack Obama and Tanzania's President Jakaya Kikwete, right, hangs above a main street in capital Dar es Salaam. The Swahili word "Karibu" reads as "Welcome".

 

Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania 


US President Barack Obama arrived in Tanzania Monday after paying homage in South Africa to his ailing idol Nelson Mandela, for the final leg of his three-nation Africa tour. Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete welcomed Obama and his family to the country's economic capital and port Dar es Salaam, as troupes of traditional dancers clapped and sang.

A guard of honour fired a 21-gun salute, as women wearing colourful dresses emblazoned with Obama's portrait danced. Excited Tanzanians began gathering since early morning to secure a spot to see Obama, with the city's streets decked out in alternating Tanzanian and US flags.

 "In Africa we have so many countries, so Obama choosing to come to Tanzania, it makes us feel happy," said Francis Gedyman, 26, a driver. "I think maybe he came to Tanzania because we don't have so much corruption, or war. Here we have peace, and democracy."

A key road -- separating Tanzania's presidential palace from the glittering blue water of the Indian Ocean -- is to be renamed after Obama.

In Tanzania, Obama's final stop on the tour which has included Senegal and South Africa, he will hold talks with Kikwete and visit the Ubungo power plant, after unveiling a new $7-billion programme to boost African electric power networks.

He will also lay a wreath at a memorial to those killed in the US embassy bombing in 1998. His wife Michelle will take part in a First Ladies forum hosted by her predecessor in the role, Laura Bush.

He arrives in Tanzania just three months after a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping, amid talk of an economic rivalry in Africa between Washington and Beijing. But his tour has been also overshadowed by the health of his hero Mandela, who has entered a fourth week in hospital where he remains critically ill.

Obama did not see Mandela, but he spent the weekend visiting sites from the revered leader's life, including the Robben Island prison where the anti-apartheid icon spent 18 years -- a visit Obama said left him "deeply humbled".

Obama stood in the tiny cell once occupied by Mandela on the windswept outcrop near Cape Town, and took his daughters to the lime quarry where the man who would become South Africa's first black president did back-breaking hard labour. "Mandela's spirit could never be imprisoned -- for his legacy is here for all to see,"

Obama said in a speech at the University of Cape Town afterwards. "Nelson Mandela showed us that one man's courage can move the world. And he calls on us to make choices that reflect not our fears, but our hopes -- in our own lives, and in the lives of our communities and our countries," he said.

There has been no update on the health of the 94-year-old Nobel peace laureate since Saturday when South African President Jacob Zuma said he remained "critical but stable".

Few details have been released about his condition or treatment.

Well-wishers continued to stop by at the shrine-like wall of goodwill messages outside the Pretoria hospital where Mandela was admitted on June 8 with a recurring lung infection, although there were fewer visitors than in previous days. On Saturday, Obama and his wife Michelle called Mandela's wife Graca Machel, and the president then privately visited several daughters and grandchildren of Mandela, to offer support and prayers.

But he decided against rolling up in his massive entourage at the Pretoria hospital where Mandela lies, worried that he would disturb the peace of the man he has described as a "personal inspiration".

Once branded a terrorist by the United States and Britain, Mandela spent 27 years in prison before walking free from a jail near Cape Town in 1990.

He won South Africa's first fully democratic elections in 1994, forging a path of racial reconciliation during his single term as president, before taking up a new role as a roving elder statesman and leading AIDS campaigner.

In a strident call for democratic change and good governance during his speech in Cape Town, the US leader used the political legacy of Mandela and South Africa's emergence from grim years of apartheid rule as proof that freedom will ultimately prevail.

 "History shows us that progress is only possible where governments exist to serve their people and not the other way around," Obama said to loud cheers.

President Barack Obama and former President George Bush


The White House says President Barack Obama and former President George Bush will meet while both leaders are in Tanzania.

The two leaders will join together Tuesday in Dar es Salaam for a wreath-laying ceremony at the US Embassy in honour of bombing there in 1998 that killed 11 people.

They'll also meet with staff at the embassy. Obama arrived in Tanzania on Monday on the final leg of his three-country tour of Africa. His Republican predecessor coincidentally also plans to be there for a conference on African women organised by the George Bush Institute.

First lady Michelle Obama and former first lady Laura Bush also plan to team up at the conference on Tuesday for a joint discussion on promoting women's education, health and economic empowerment. - Sapa-AP 

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