Wednesday, September 23, 2015

U.S. Issues Statement on the Situation in Burkina Faso

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 17, 2015

Statement by the National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice on the Situation in Burkina Faso

The United States condemns, in the strongest terms, the unconstitutional seizure of power by elements of the Presidential Security Regiment in Burkina Faso. We call on the responsible parties to release immediately those being detained, order aligned forces to stand down, respect the rights of civilians to peacefully assemble, and put Burkina Faso back on the path to presidential elections in October.

We continue to assess the facts as the situation unfolds. We are deeply disappointed that the self-interested actions of a few are threatening the historic opportunity that the people of Burkina Faso have to cast their ballots and build a new future for the country. Nearly a year ago, a broad coalition came together in Burkina Faso to reject attempts by the previous president to extend his stay in office illegitimately. They demanded respect for the constitution and the opportunity to change their government through a legitimate process. These courageous efforts to advance Burkinabe democracy must not be undone, and the United States stands with the people of Burkina Faso in rejecting democratic backsliding.

The United States will continue to work with our partners, including the Economic Community of West African States, the African Union, and the United Nations, to bring about a peaceful resolution.

We will review our foreign assistance to Burkina Faso in light of evolving events.

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U.S. Welcomes Mozambique Announcement on Landmine Clearance

File Photo
Press Statement
John Kirby
Department of State Spokesperson
Washington, DC
September 17, 2015

The United States welcomes Mozambique’s announcement today that it has completed clearance of all known fields of landmines in the country.

Since 1993, when Mozambique emerged from decades of conflict as one of the world’s most landmine-affected nations, the United States has been proud to partner with the people of Mozambique, investing more than $55 million toward improving the safety and security of local communities though the U.S. Conventional Weapons Destruction program.

Through that partnership — which includes the international donor community and humanitarian demining organizations — we have worked diligently to safely clear landmines and unexploded ordnance, prevent injuries through community outreach and education, and provide medical and social services to survivors of accidents involving these legacies of past conflicts.

The United States is proud to be the world’s leading provider of financial and technical assistance to help countries address this serious humanitarian challenge. Since 1993, we have invested nearly $2.5 billion in aid in more than 90 countries to decrease the threats posed by landmines and explosive remnants of war. Our efforts have dramatically reduced the world’s annual landmine casualty rate and helped 16 countries declare themselves landmine-free.

Humanitarian demining in places like Mozambique sets the stage for post-conflict recovery and development. It is another important way in which the United States promotes international peace and security.

Remarks By South African Foreign Minister Nkoana-Mashabane and Sec. Kerry

Photo: State Department
Remarks
John Kerry
Secretary of State
Treaty Room
Washington, DC
September 16, 2015

SECRETARY KERRY: Good morning, everybody. I’m really pleased to be able to welcome for a series of meetings today in our Strategic Dialogue the Foreign Minister of South Africa Nkoana-Mashabane. And it’s my pleasure to report that South Africa is playing an increasingly important global role, a very important leadership role on the continent of Africa, and, we are pleased to say, an important cooperative role together with the United States.

Our bilateral trade relationship is a $20 billion-a-year trade relationship and growing. South Africa has made an important democratic transition, which is vital as an example to the world, stands up for human rights, has made a very important commitment on the health sector, and will be the first country in all of Africa to have taken over total management of the HIV/AIDS program, PEPFAR, which is an important transition that we’ve been working on together. And we continue to work on security issues, on leadership issues within the continent and elsewhere, as well as a particular commitment on the energy sector.

So with the Climate Change Conference coming up in Paris and renewable energy, a commitment South Africa has made, again, that’s an important role that South Africa can play in the days ahead. So very happy to welcome my friend here today, and we look forward to a very fruitful Strategic Dialogue.

FOREIGN MINISTER NKOANA-MASHABANE: Well, Secretary Kerry, it’s indeed an honor for us to be received by yourself here. Can I say our in-law? Because your wife was born in Mozambique.

SECRETARY KERRY: That’s right, and educated in South Africa.

FOREIGN MINISTER NKOANA-MASHABANE: And educated in South Africa. So it is a great honor for us to come here and continue with this very, very important dialogue forum with the United States of America and the leadership of the State Secretary, to also confirm that we are friends, we have very strong bilateral ties, we have values and principles of democracy, good governance, and defense for human rights, but South Africa indeed has transited and gave birth to a democracy, and we’ve been maintaining the (inaudible) of that for the past 21 years.

Our economy is growing and the economic cooperation between our two countries. Indeed, the United States of America’s investors in South Africa – 600 companies are very comfortable in South Africa and the number is growing, and the U.S. has become the biggest foreign direct investor, the third trading partner, and this we see growing. More than 15,000 new jobs have been created through this partnership. We’re very happy with PEPFAR, the health cooperation program. We are finalizing the final details of our AGOA, and we’re going to take this opportunity to thank the U.S. Government for having kept South Africa in the AGOA Forum for the next coming 10 years. We’ll continue to work together, indeed, for issues of peace and security, particularly cooperation in line with Resolution 2033 of the United Nations Security Council, that we will cooperate with permanent members of the Security Council and the Security Council at large on issues of peace and security on our continent. And during our dialogue forum, we’ll also be looking at specific areas that need our immediate attention.

Always a pleasure, and we’re looking forward to growing these very important ties between the two democracies.

SECRETARY KERRY: Thank you.

FOREIGN MINISTER NKOANA-MASHABANE: Thank you.

United States Mission to Somalia Commences Operations

U.S Mission to Somalia team with Somalia Ambassador to Kenya in a ceremony to mark the commencement of U.S Mission to Somalia held in NairobiPhoto: United States Mission to Somalia website

Press Statement
John Kirby
Department of State Spokesperson
Washington, DC
September 8, 2015

The Department of State is pleased to announce the commencement of operations by the United States Mission to Somalia. The new mission reflects a continuation of U.S. efforts to normalize the U.S.-Somalia bilateral relationship since recognizing the Federal Government of Somalia on January 17, 2013. The United States Mission to Somalia is based within the United States Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, and will be headed by a ChargĂ© d’Affaires until the President appoints, and Senate confirms, the next U.S. Ambassador to Somalia. The launch of the U.S. Mission to Somalia is the next step towards reestablishing a diplomatic presence by the United States in Somalia as announced by Secretary Kerry on May 5 during his historic visit to Mogadishu. U.S. officials will continue to travel to Somalia to conduct official business as security conditions permit.

Asst. Sec. Rivkin’s Remarks at the Nigerian American Chamber of Commerce Reception

File Photo
Remarks
Charles H. Rivkin
Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs
Abuja, Nigeria
September 7, 2015

As prepared

Let me start by thanking the Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce for sponsoring this event this evening as well as the SME Finance Conference tomorrow and Wednesday. The Embassy tells me that the NACC is a very active voice for business in northern Nigeria and a strong link between the Nigerian and U.S. business communities on many levels. So thank you for the work you do, and for the highly cooperative relationship between the NACC and the U.S. Embassy.

This is the first stop on a trip I am taking to Abuja and Lagos, followed by Dakar in Senegal. My purpose is simple: to do my part to continue to advance our economic engagement in this region, of which Nigeria plays a vital role. I’m pleased to have the opportunity this evening to reaffirm the strength of our partnership and advance our mutual interests.

I’d like to give you a view of Nigeria from Washington D.C.’s perspective. First, I think it’s accurate to say there is a consensus that Nigeria is at an historic fork in the road, so to speak – choosing between business as usual and a new direction. Nigeria is ready for a new direction and has demonstrated that readiness in largely peaceful elections in which the outgoing President conceded defeat.

There is also consensus that His Excellency President Buhari’s top two priorities are the right priorities – defeating Boko Haram and the insecurity issues in the country, and attacking corruption. Addressing these two issues would have a positive impact on the economy and would be significant in improving the business climate in Nigeria.

Already, President Buhari’s efforts to reform the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation is seen among outside observers as a welcome development. It is a concrete example of a new direction for Nigeria, rather than business as usual.

There is also an external factor that makes the case for a new direction so compelling: the decline in the price of oil. There is significant interest in Washington in how Nigeria will respond to this new economic paradigm.

And that brings me to one of the main purposes of my visit to Nigeria. Our two countries share mutual priorities not just politically, but economically as well. Those mutual priorities include increasing foreign direct investment and increasing trade, investing in people, creating jobs, and making our societies more prosperous.

The choices our two governments take on economic policy will have a direct impact on how far we can go in meeting these priorities. The U.S. government has already taken steps demonstrating our commitment to increasing trade with Africa.

The historic ten-year extension of AGOA signed into law by President Obama provides Nigeria duty-free access to the U.S. market for most goods.

One of the best ways for Nigeria to be able to take full advantage of AGOA is to remain outwardly focused and ensure that it is an attractive destination for international companies and international capital.

Broadly speaking, countries posture themselves somewhere on the spectrum between a closed economy – think North Korea – or a wide open economy – think Singapore. Experience has taught us that the more open economies are, the more competitive they become, and the more closed they are, the more they are left behind.

I am confident that Nigeria can compete more in the world. I hope that in considering how best to develop its potential, Nigeria will steer in a direction that opens more doors to the outside.
Shutting doors to foreign competition, whether through import bans, prohibitive tariffs, or foreign exchange controls, will not make protected domestic firms more competitive.

Consumer demand around the world is based on price, quality, and choice. Consumers, whether businesses or individuals, are right, not wrong, in wanting to get the best products in exchange for their hard-earned income.

While tariffs on their face may be intended as a means to increase government revenues, when prohibitive or exorbitant, they produce little or no revenue except to those engaged in smuggling and corruption, and hurt the development of formal markets.

As Nigeria considers which direction it wants to go, I encourage it to adopt more open trade and investment policies. Among other things, this will help develop more formal markets, which in turn will help set the wheels in motion of a virtual cycle that leads to more jobs and more investment. One of the key lessons from the recently concluded AGOA Forum in Gabon is that businesses are more likely to invest in countries with open and regionally integrated trade.

In addition, I believe Nigeria must focus on intellectual property protections if it wants to keep up with the global knowledge economy. Given the creativity and intellectual ability and accomplishments of Nigerians in literature, film, music, software development, clothing design, and many other areas, it is clear Nigeria has resources, but it will never be able to fully develop those resources unless they can be turned into bankable assets through effective IPR protections. Tomorrow I’ll be meeting with members of government agencies working in that area to see how we might cooperate toward that end. But IPR must be a priority of this government in order to be effective.

In short, we are encouraging the new administration to adopt policies that welcome foreign firms, protect their intellectual property, and allow firms the freedom to use their supply chains as they see fit. I’ll be engaging on these issues while in Abuja, including our concerns over the ICT local content guidelines.

In many ways, Nigeria is an economic giant. With 180 million citizens, a GDP that’s more than $500 billion, and oil production that’s approximately two million barrels per day, Nigeria has Africa’s largest population, its biggest economy, and is the continent’s biggest oil producer and exporter. In other words, it is a leader in many ways, and we believe that leadership should extend to trade and investment and IPR. Nigeria offers abundant natural resources and a low-cost labor pool, and enjoys mostly duty-free trade with other member countries of the Economic Community of West African States.

The potential is clearly enormous and, naturally, the U.S. government is committed to doing everything it can to support the new government’s economic reform plans; as well as its efforts to tackle corruption and reform the energy sector.

In our conversations with political leaders, we will continue to underscore those points. We will also make clear that your robust presence brings benefits in the other direction. Foreign direct investment – in turn – will help Nigeria’s economic recovery and its ability to realize the aspirations of its citizens.

Given the signals that President Buhari has sent out about fighting corruption and working for greater transparency in the energy sector, we feel that there are opportunities for American businesses to form public-private partnerships to support those outcomes. After all, a government cannot effectively fight and prevent corruption alone.

So we encourage U.S. businesses to consider partnering with the Nigerian Government and with organizations such as the Convention on Business Integrity, a Nigerian NGO, led by current Vice President Osinbajo and supported by Siemens and others, that works with public and private partners to combat corruption.

As Benjamin Franklin said: “It takes many good deeds to build a good reputation, and only one bad one to lose it.”
On energy issues, we are also working with the Nigerian government through Power Africa to sustain power sector privatization reforms. As we are telling our counterparts, the objective is to create a more conducive environment for investment in this sector so we can enhance power generation.
I’d like to close with a quote from Desmond Tutu. In a speech at the Nelson Mandela Foundation in Johannesburg, he said: “Don’t raise your voice, improve your argument.”

As President Obama and Secretary Kerry have made clear, Nigeria is our most important strategic partner in the region. Today, our relationship is defined not by what the United States can do for Nigeria, but by what we can do with Nigeria. We just have to find a language and a common purpose that helps us get the prosperity and economic growth that everyone wants.

So with that, I look forward to hearing your thoughts on the challenges for businesses in Nigeria and, more importantly, what we can do together to influence positive changes. By doing so, we can support Nigeria’s efforts to grow to its best potential as a provider of jobs for its people, a friend of outside investment, and a welcoming regional and a global leader.

Thank you.

U.S. Issues Statement on Central African Republic


United States Commends the Decision of the Transitional Constitutional Court to Uphold the Elections Ineligibility Clause

Press Statement
Mark C. Toner
Deputy Department Spokesperson
Washington, DC
September 3, 2015

The United States welcomes the August 28 decision of the Central African Republic’s (CAR) transitional constitutional court to uphold the transitional national charter clause that precludes current and former senior transitional government members from running in the upcoming presidential and legislative elections currently scheduled for October and November 2015. We commend the court for its decision, which upholds the rule of law and provides a clear signal to the people of CAR that political authority in their country is bound by the tenets of the interim constitution, not arbitrary decisions. We call upon all members of the transitional government, past and future, to respect the court’s ruling.

The United States further commends the constitutional court for its strong rulings in January and July in favor of including refugees in the elections, an important decision that seeks to ensure that the elections are representative and that CAR’s future is inclusive of its entire population. We call upon the transitional government, including those in charge of elections preparations, to reinforce the spirit of the decision by redoubling efforts to organize and expand elections preparations.


Sec. Kerry’s Remarks at the PEPFAR Diplomatic Reception

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry delivers remarks at the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) Diplomatic Reception at the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C., on September 2, 2015Photo: State Department
Remarks
John Kerry
Secretary of State
Treaty Room
Washington, DC
September 2, 2015

Well, good evening, everybody. Thank you. Welcome, your excellencies, ambassadors from other countries, to the United States, and American ambassadors who are in some of those other countries. We’re really happy you’re here. Welcome, everybody – guests, distinguished advocates, and passionate people all or you wouldn’t be here, and I know that.

I don’t think Debbi needs much guiding light, guys. (Laughter.) She shines pretty brightly on her own, and we’re really blessed, Deborah, to have you doing this. I am so grateful to you for your leadership. It’s exactly why I picked you. As a Navy guy, it was tough; I looked around the Navy, but I had to (inaudible) on an Army person – (laughter) – and she’s done great, so (inaudible).
(Applause.) I put the national interest ahead of parochial interests. (Laughter.)

Obviously her own commitment to fighting this scourge goes back decades, literally – in the 1990s the vaccine trial, which was the first clinical HIV/AIDS research to show any real potential. As the director of the military’s HIV research efforts out at Walter Reed she was way ahead of the curve in seeing HIV/AIDS for what it is: not just a global health crisis but as a human rights issue. And she also recognized that it demanded an unprecedented response.

She has wrestled personally, real time, with many of the challenges that all of you have come here to discuss today. So I think we couldn’t have a better person at the helm of our efforts from our point of view, and I hope all of you have found it as productive as I think it is in working with her. And I can see heads nodding and I take that as a resounding yes. (Laughter.)

Debbi mentioned a moment ago – closer to the vision of an AIDS-free generation. That’s our dream. That’s what we’ve been working towards. And unlike some dreams people grow up with or take on in the course of public life which really just get dashed against the bureaucratic resistance or the indifference of people in various places, this is one where we have really been able to make a difference, and it’s been bipartisan. It’s been everybody coming to the table without regard to ideology and politics, and it’s quite extraordinary.

When I think back on what Debbi was saying about the early days in the Senate, I can remember my elation when we came out of a meeting and my great aide back then who helped make all this happen, Nancy Stetson, and I were just amazed that we got Jesse Helms to sign on, which was a huge turning point. And we got this through the United States Senate in unanimity – unanimity. You couldn’t do that today. Just wouldn’t have happened.

So we’ve been on an interesting journey but we all know this is not a done deal. And what we need to do now as we reach to save more lives than ever before is recognize that it’s not hypothetical. There are specific things we need to fight for.

When I traveled to Ethiopia last year – I’ll never forget – I heard about a woman. I was at the health center there in Ethiopia. I forgot the name of it. But there are a number – they’re treating folks there, HIV positive. And I was told a story about a woman named Abeba, who was the mother of two daughters who was HIV positive. And soon after her diagnosis, she found herself literally all alone – she was walking, trying to get to the health center. And she was so sick, so weak, that she literally just curled up on the side of the road, and it was raining like crazy. And she was too weak and too sick to finish her journey to the health center.

But when a group of community workers spotted her, they didn’t drive by, they didn’t look away. They stopped and they picked her up and they took her to the health center. And they found housing for her and they helped find money for her, put a roof over her head and nurse her back to health. And today, she is not just a survivor. She is fighting in order to work to become a community volunteer herself and become a mentor to young women across Ethiopia.

That’s just one human face on this story. When I was in South Africa, I remember going up into the mountains north of Durban and going into a mud hut and meeting with a woman who was – had that hacking cough and was weak, and her kids were taking care of her. And I saw so many young people who have become adults way ahead of their time.

So thanks to President Obama’s leadership and the commitment of so many in this room – and it really wouldn’t happen without all of you here. I hope you understand the depth of that, how important it is – PEPFAR is now serving antiretroviral treatment for 7.7 million men, women, and children. And at the U.S. Africa Leaders’ Summit, I was proud to announce the Accelerating Children’s HIV/AIDS Treatment Initiative. It will put life-saving treatment within the reach for another 300,000 children. And we’re also providing HIV testing and counseling to more than 14 million pregnant women. We’re supporting more than 6.5 million voluntary medical male circumcision.

We’ve trained more than 140,000 new health care workers to deliver HIV and other health services in AIDS-affected countries. And last December, we launched the DREAMS partnership, which will specifically target adolescent girls and young women.

So we have made enormous progress in this fight, and PEPFAR remains the largest commitment of any nation to address a single disease and has become a model, frankly, for treating other diseases, including Ebola, which you don’t hear about now. And you don’t hear about it because we did what we needed to do and we learned a lot from this about what that was and how you implement. So the President’s targets have pushed us to go further and to be more innovative, to forge new partnerships, including with many of you who are here in this room.

So it’s clear we’re turning a very important corner, but we have to carry this fight across the finish line. And the way we’re going to that is to – first, we need to recognize we’ve got to continue to make creative and strategic investments based on the latest science and best practices. And in a tight budget environment, every dollar counts. We know that better than anybody. And that’s why we have to continue setting benchmarks for outcomes and put weight behind the HIV prevention, treatment, and care intervention that works.

Second, we have to focus on the impact of HIV/AIDS specifically on women and girls. And we know that it remains the leading cause of disease or of death for women of reproductive age in low and middle-income countries, and we know that women and girls represent nearly 60 percent of people living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa. So that has to change, and we can make it change.

And third, we have to promote greater accountability and transparency through the new Country Health Partnerships. We’ve watched this transition. It’s proving itself every single day. South Africa, Rwanda, Namibia are among the nations on the front lines of it, and each of these countries is providing a model for PEPFAR in transitioning from direct aid into delivering support for locally run, self-sustaining efforts. In South Africa, perhaps, the shift towards greater ownership now means that we are reaching 50 percent more people as a result of that with prevention care and treatment.

So look, it’s worth remembering what we have achieved since we started this. It was pretty unthinkable a little more than a decade ago. And what is inspiring is we know we’re not done yet.
That’s important. So with your efforts, we absolutely can achieve this dream of an AIDS-free generation. I’m proud of the work that Deborah’s doing; proud of Heather Higginbottom, who’s been very much involved in this as our deputy. And we can and we will defeat this horrible disease. I’ve always believed that. And because of the hard work and the willingness of people to put themselves on the line, sometimes when it was very difficult – I can remember when talking about HIV/AIDS was talking about a death sentence. And all of you remember that too. And I remember a lot of friends of mine who kept talking to me about how many funerals they were going to. How different life was in this country.

But because we committed, because we go people of both parties, people of conscience to come together, we were able to make this difference. And I am confident that if we just hang in there and continue and we’re smart and diligent and stay at it, we’re going to get the job done. Thank you all for what you do to be part of this. I really appreciate it. Thank you. (Applause.)