Creating Africa's new image
By our reporter
26 March 1998
Before leaving on his African tour, Clinton announced that
he intended to acquaint Americans with a "new Africa,"
one characterized not by war, poverty and famine, but rather economic
growth and opportunity. Creating this image has proven a complicated
and none too delicate operation.
Long before Clinton's plane touched down in Ghana, advance
teams of White House aides and secret service details, together
with the regimes in the countries which he visited, got to work
setting the stage.
In the Ugandan capital of Kampala, for example, police took
to the streets four days before the president's arrival, staging
a dragnet against the city's homeless population and, in particular,
the large numbers of children who live in its streets. Hundreds
of youth, together with elderly and disabled people, were loaded
onto trucks and taken to prisons outside the capital.
A group of social service organizations protested the government's
action. "Children who have been receiving counseling services
to prepare them for leaving the streets now find themselves in
custody," read a statement issued by the groups.
The 20-mile route from the airport to the capital was also
given a face-lift for the presidential visit. Shacks lining the
side of the road were given a coat of whitewash. Coffin vendors
were reportedly told to place their wares under wraps so as not
to remind the visiting dignitaries about the country's high death
rate, much of it resulting from the AIDS epidemic. Rehearsing
security operations, secret service helicopters succeeded in flattening
several shantytown dwellings near the center of the capital.
Clinton was booked into the Sheraton Hotel in Kampala, where
the cost of a room is only slightly less than the country's annual
per capita income.
See Also:
A bid to make Africa profitable for US
capital
[26 March 1998]
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