US
President Barack Obama has reunited with his extended family on the first
evening of his trip to Kenya. In his first visit as US president, Obama is
expected to discuss trade and counterterrorism strategies.
Deutsche Welle, 25 July 2015
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| Barack Obama reuniting with his family |
While the
media has focused extensively on US President Barack Obama's family in Kenya,
the US government has stressed that the aim of the president's visit is to
highlight Kenya's ties with the US. Obama's trip is set to include talks on
trade and counterterrorism strategies.
On
Saturday, Kenya and the US are to discuss enhancing cooperation in the fight
against the al Qaeda-linked al-Shabab militia, responsible for the 2013 bombing of Nairobi's Westgate shopping mall that killed 67 people. The group recently
attacked a university near the Somali border, leaving 148 students and teachers dead.
Obama is
also scheduled to open the Global Entrepreneurship Summit, visiting along with
more than 200 US investors. Later on, he will meet with President Uhuru
Kenyatta, who was indicted by the International Criminal Court for crimes
against humanity in a disputed 2007 election. The charges against Kenyatta were
dropped in December.
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| This is Obama's first trip to his father's homeland as US president |
Last visit
in 2006
After
receiving a warm welcome by millions of Kenyans, Obama spent Friday evening
reuniting with his extended family.
At his
hotel in Nairobi, the president met with the woman he calls "Granny,"
also known as "Mama Sarah," who helped raise his late father. His
half-sister Auma Obama and about three dozen other family members were also
present. The family engaged in an amiable chat, sitting at the restaurant of
the hotel where Obama was staying in the Kenyan capital.
Auma said
her father would be proud to see his son as US president if he were alive
today. "He'd be extremely proud and say, 'Well done'…But then he'd add,
'But obviously, you're an Obama," she said in an interview with CNN.
Kenyan
heritage
"I
don't think that Kenyans think of Obama as African-American. They think of him
as Kenyan-American," EJ Hogendoorn, deputy program director for Africa at
the International Crisis Group, told the Associated Press.
Obama is
linked to Kenya through his father, Barack Obama Sr., who left the country as a
young man to study in Hawaii, where he met the president's mother, Stanley Ann
Dunham. Obama Sr. left Hawaii when his son was just 2 years old, for Harvard,
after which he went back to Kenya. The president met his father only once more
in his life, when he was 10 years old. Obama Sr. would die soon after, in a car
crash in 1982.
Obama Sr.
was an economist who opposed the leader of his country at the time, then
President Jomo Kenyatta, over tribal divisions and allegations of corruption.
He was fired by the president and spent the rest of his life dealing with
financial problems and heavy drinking.
mg/cmk (AP, Reuters)
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