President Barack Obama speaks during a meeting with civil society
leaders at the YALI Regional Leadership Center, on Sunday, July 26,
2015, in Nairobi. On the final day of his visit in Kenya, Obama laid out
his vision for Kenya’s future and broad themes of U.S.-Kenya relations.
(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
July 26, 2015
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA IN CONVERSATION WITH MEMBERS OF CIVIL SOCIETY
YALI Regional Leadership Center
Kenyatta University
Nairobi, Kenya
1:57 P.M. EAT
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, this is a very good-looking group.
(Laughter.) So it’s wonderful to be with all of you. My name is Barack
Obama. (Laughter.) In case you didn’t know. I want to, first of all,
begin by thanking Kenyatta University for hosting us here today. We
are very grateful. And the Vice Chancellor is here — Madam Vice
Chancellor, thank you. (Applause.)
And before we get started, I want to point out that this is one of
our first regional centers for the Young African Leaders program — the
Young African Leaders Initiative — or YALI — that we’re doing. As many
of you know, this is one of my labors of love here in Africa, an
outgrowth of some of the work that we had been doing. Seeing the
incredible contributions that young leaders were making in so many
countries, we thought let’s bring them together and give them
opportunities to learn from each other, and network and access
resources, so that they can, then, in their home countries, be able to
accomplish remarkable things.
And so we’re really excited about that. So we thank the university
for allowing us to use these facilities for these outstanding people.
I just gave a very long speech. (Laughter.)
Q We saw it.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: You’re saying it was also too long? Is that what
you’re saying? (Laughter.) She nodded. She was all like, yes, it was
very long. (Laughter.)
So because you just saw my speech, it doesn’t make sense for me to
give a whole ‘nother speech. I’m really here more to listen and to
learn. But I do want to just make a couple of brief remarks at the top.
And then what I’m going to do is I’m going to call on a number of you.
I’ve got a few names already to get us started, and then depending on
how much time we have, then I’ll try to see if I can call on some
additional persons.
America has historically been a country of people who participate in
the lives of their communities and their societies. And it’s one of the
things that make us, I believe, a great nation. There’s a famous
French writer named Alec de Tocqueville, who traveled to the United
States, and wrote a very famous book called “Democracy in America.” And
the point that he made in this book during the course of his travels
was that what made America a democracy was not just that it had
elections, but that it was a society of joiners and volunteers, and
people who wanted constantly to be involved in making their communities
better. And if there was an injustice, they wanted to do something
about it. And they would form organizations and they would form town
halls, and disseminate information — so that what the government did was
obviously important, but what was just as important was what individual
citizens were able to do to create a fabric of mutual concern and
regard and advocacy that would shape government policy and would shape
how societies were organized.
And almost all the progress that America has made in expanding
freedom and opportunity has grown as a result of that bottom-up civic
participation. The civil rights movement, the women’s rights movement,
the movement most recently to make sure that our gay and lesbian
brothers and sisters have equal rights, the movement to end wars, in
some cases, the movement to provide better resources for poor children.
And there’s the halfway house movement, and the movement to — the
settlement house movement, rather, and to make sure that children and
orphans were properly cared for. The movement to public education and
public universities. The environmental movement.
So many of these things arose because ordinary citizens started to
get together and speak out and press their demands on their government.
And eventually, politicians responded.
And I got my start in public life not as an elected official but as a
community organizer in a poor neighborhood in Chicago. And I would
work with churches and community groups to try to improve the school
system, or bring affordable housing. And we weren’t always completely
successful, but it taught me the importance of the voices of ordinary
people when they come together to create a better vision for the future.
And that’s why I think civil society is so important. And that’s why
I emphasized it in the speech that I made today. And this is something
that I emphasize wherever I go — democracy does not stop on Election
Day. For a real democracy to work, and for a society to thrive and
continually improve, it requires that people continue to participate.
And there have to be laws in place to protect that space and facilitate
people’s ability to participate.
Now, the good news is, here in Kenya, you now have a constitution
that creates the space for such participation. Alongside freedom of the
press, and freedom of assembly, and the ability to organize
politically, these are precious freedoms that have to be protected.
Because Kenya is a young democracy there’s always a concern that it
might slip back and that space might narrow, despite what the
constitution says. And I just want to say part of the reason why it’s
important for me to be here today is to send a message that we in the
United States at least believe that civil society is important and we
want to continue to affirm it, and we want to listen and hear what it is
that ordinary citizens, working together, have to say about their
communities and about their lives.
And if Kenya can continue to cultivate those habits of participation
and citizenship and freedom, then the country is going to be better off,
and it’s going to continue to make progress for all people and not just
some.
So with those opening remarks, what I want to do now is just open it
up for conversation. And I have in my hand some names to call on. I
may not get through all of them. I think you’ve been instructed to try
to be relatively brief. (Laughter.) In some cases, what I’ll do is
I’ll respond right away to the comments. In some cases, I may wait and
respond at the end. But this is designed not so much as a town hall, to
ask me questions, it’s more designed for you to give me a sense of the
things that are important to you, so that I can learn — and because I
think this is going to be televised — so that the Kenya people as a
whole can hear as well.
And the only thing I would ask is that everybody be respectful. And
one of the rules of good civil society I believe is that you’re
respectful of the people who disagree with you. And that’s part of what
makes civil society work. If you can have civil disagreements, and you
can listen to each other and not just shout, that’s what creates an
environment that leads to progress over the long term.
And the only other thing I’m going to do is, because it’s warm, I’m
going to take off my jacket. You’re free to do so as well. This is
pretty relaxed. (Laughter.)
Okay, so — and we’ve got a few topics where we’ve got some civil
society organizations that are already working on some of these issues.
And one of the topics that hasn’t gotten a lot of attention during my
trip but I consider very important because it’s part of Kenya’s
heritage, but it’s also part of global heritage — and that is the issue
of wildlife trafficking, where active citizens are really making a
difference.
And I’m going to call on Tom Lalampaa of the Northern Rangelands Trust, to tell us about what he’s doing.
MR. LALAMPAA: Thank you very much, Mr. President. I work for
Northern Rangelands Trust Entity, an umbrella community organization
currently supporting over 30 community-based conservancies.
We’ve had a lot of successes on the trafficking as well. But I just
want to mention two high-level impacts. One is that we’ve been able to
develop a model of a community conservancy that is unique, that has
proven very successful, now widely accepted by the national government
and the county governments. And all the model has is that, first and
foremost, is that it is grassroots-rooted. It’s formed by the local
communities — by the elders, the women and the youth in the villages.
And so these institutions help to anchor good governance, gender
matters, awareness, micro-finance for our youth and our women, s well,
and many, many more programs, including the — getting water. It’s
become an entry point for the national government and the county
governments to deliver services to the local communities.
It’s also structured in such a way that the political leaders take
part in those institutions. So they are local community institutions
that are registered with the government. And it’s just amazing, because
they are creating a platform for dialogue — a platform for communities
to decide where they want water, where they want help, where they want —
what they want to do in matters.
The second high-level impact, Mr. President, is getting conservation
to drive peace and conflict resolution in northern Kenya. In northern
Kenya, peace and security is quite elusive for many reasons. One is
because of illegal firearms. Secondly, it’s just because of the nature
of the mistrust among our ethic communities. And thirdly, also because
of the natural resources — pasture, water for our cattle. And so we’ve
managed to get the conservation to drive peace and conflict resolution
in northern Kenya.
I was telling my friend, Paula, here that when communities, local
communities — they want peace. There’s no way the elephants live in
peace. So that’s what I’m saying, Mr. President, that all that has been
made possible through the support of the U.S. government, and in
particular, through the USAID Kenya.
Mr. President, we have a number of challenges, but I’ll put them in
terms of a kind request to you. One, we’d appreciate the U.S.
government support to protect and conserve the remaining African
elephants. I’m saying the remaining because we have lost many. You can
help us in three ways. First and foremost is to crush demand and
market, Mr. President. Not even reducing it. if we can, let’s crush it
once and for all.
The Kenya government — the civil society, ourselves, and the local
communities can only prevent poaching from the source, from being
poached. But the markets and the demand, Mr. President, are far outside
our borders. We are helpless. Please help us.
The other way you can help us protect and conserve the remaining
African elephants, Mr. President, is to get the U.S. government be a
member of the African-led elephants protection initiative. Currently,
nine African states have signed to it. So it would just bring enormous
support and recognition if your government can join it and also be a
part of it.
Thirdly, in terms of helping us conserve and protect our elephants,
the remaining, is to help us deal with the ivory. The second request
that I think would benefit all of us here, Mr. President, my request
also is that if possible — we notice this is discussed all the time, but
our humble request of the U.S. government is to increase the
international support for the international programs. And I have in
mind, I talk about the U.S. aid that’s involved, and any other U.S.
government-related development agencies — because it’s from that pot
that we are going to support conservation, that we can improve
livelihoods, that we can support governance.
I always have a feeling that the USAID office, wherever they are in
Africa, and in the world, they get massive applications, and they can
only deal with so much. Lastly, Mr. President, I must admit the fact
that the embassy’s office — the USAID offices have been very good with
us and extremely supportive.
Thank you so much, Mr. President. (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Let me just say, first of all, Tom, you’re an
eloquent spokesman for your cause and that was an excellent
presentation. The second thing I have to say is that everybody is going
to have to be briefer than Tom. (Laughter.) Just because I want to
make sure that I get as many comments as possible.
The third point is, with respect to conservation, you said the
elephants that have been lost — 20,000 elephants have been lost in
recent years. And part of the reason why civil society has to be
mobilized around conservation is that if people have a choice — if they
see a false choice between their own livelihoods and conserving animals
then the animals will lose. If they’re organized so that they see that
preservation and conservation enhances their lives, then we win, because
they feel ownership and they will participate.
And that’s why the organizations that you’re putting together are so important.
Now, we’ve got another person just on this issue before we move to
another issue — Paula Kahumbu, right here. I could tell because she’s
got an arm band that says, “Hands Off Our Elephants.” (Laughter.) With
the Wildlife Trust.
MS. KAHUMBU: Thank you, Mr. President. First, on behalf of all the
conservation community — and there are several people in the room —
thank you so much for your initiatives on the African elephant in
particular.
More than 30,000 elephants –
PRESIDENT OBAMA: 30,000.
MS. KAHUMBU: — are being killed every year in Africa. That’s one
every 15 minutes. Your grandchildren elephants. I love elephants. I
want the whole world to fall in love with elephants. And I started this
campaign, “Hands Off Our Elephants,” under the organization, Wildlife
Direct, with the First Lady Margaret Kenyatta, to empower and mobilize
Kenyans, Africans across the entire continent to save elephants. They
are our heritage. They are our identity. And it’s our duty. And it’s
not just Africans who benefit from this. The whole world benefits.
It’s not been easy, but our work has really led to a change in the
hearts and minds of Kenyans, and also the laws. We’ve been at the
center of judicial reforms in this country. Our work has led to the
arrest of one of the most — what do I say –notorious suspected ivory
kingpins, Feisal Mohamed Ali. For the first time in Kenya, an ivory
trafficker is behind bars. And that’s thanks to support from your
embassy, through Ambassador Godec, and many other organizations.
And while we’re succeeding locally in Kenya, poaching is down, the
problem across Africa is escalating, and the demand for ivory is
actually exploding. We’re dealing with a wildlife crisis alone. We’re
dealing with international wildlife crime. And that’s why my
organization goes after traffickers. We’re dealing with people who are
funding terrorism, and we’re dealing with a crime that is fueled by
corruption.
So we have two requests. The first is that you take this message
back to the American people. We’re often asked, how can we help. It’s
very simple: Tell the American people, don’t buy ivory. It’s the
simplest way to help. Secondly, we request that the USA takes a lead in
pursuing international wildlife traffickers with the same vigor and
rigor that you apply to money laundering and drug crimes. And we
believe that this can be done through strengthening your legal
assistance role not just in the demand countries, but source countries
and transit countries.
Because we know that the number of people involved in this crime is
actually relatively small compared to those other crimes. And so we can
crush this very quickly and end the war and save elephants for all of
humanity.
Thank you. (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Thank you. Well, as you may have noted, yesterday
one of our announcements was to be even stricter with respect to any
ivory sales inside the United States. I mean, we really are cracking
down on that.
And with respect to the international networks, you’re absolutely
right that there’s a connection between corrupt officials getting paid,
criminals being armed, and the ivory trade. You have this linkage that
should be of concern to all of us. And it’s international in scope.
Most recently, the United States is involved in negotiations with the
Asian countries, the Asia Pacific region — something called the
Trans-Pacific Partnership. One of the things we’re trying to accomplish
in the trade agreement is for many of these countries with still strong
demand for ivory to start getting much more serious about the
enforcement of their laws, and have it embedded in the trade agreements
that we initiate.
So, hopefully, we’ll be able to influence not just what happens in
the United States, but also in some of the areas where the demand is
heaviest.
Another topic where we’ve seen some progress, and this is something
that’s close to my heart because I’ve got two daughters, and close to
Michelle’s heart — she’s been involved internationally, trying to
highlight the issue of girls’ education with what we’re calling the Let
Girls Learn initiative that involves many of our international agencies —
is the issue of girls’ education. Obviously I’ve made it a big
emphasis in my speech here today.
So we’ve got a couple of people to talk about some of the work that’s
being done through civil society on this issue. And I’m going to start
with Kennedy Odede of Shining Hope for Communities.
MR. ODEDE: Mr. President, it’s my pleasure and privilege to meet
someone like you who believes in grassroots change. You and I, we share
one background that you did social work in Chicago and I’m doing it in
Kibera where I grew up. I grew us whereby it’s really hard to make it.
There’s no hope, no dream. Many young men end up being — go to crime.
It’s easy for them — if they’re not able to enjoy even tourism because
they don’t have a dream. There’s no hope in them.
Mr. President, I was really having a hard time in my community, but
we said, enough is enough — and, yes, we can! We came together with a
soccer ball and that became a movement that really circled around girls’
education. We built the first school in Kibera called Kibera School
for Girls and then started providing social services to men, too. And
that became world-changing.
But my challenge is that how do you take a grassroots thing like this
across Africa, and by having more partners joining that? Thank you so
much. (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: You know, organizations like yours, if you show
that it works and you’re creating a model of success, then it’s more
likely that it gets adopted in other places. People learn from seeing
something succeed that people might not have believed before could
happen. And if they see that a school for girls in Kibera, with all the
poverty there, is successful, that means it can succeed anywhere.
So we’re very encouraged by the good work that you’re doing.
Now, we also have with us Linet Momposhi. Linet is right there. Now,
Linet is a student and she’s here from Pangani Girls Form Two. Linet.
(Applause.)
MS. MOMPOSHI: Thank you, Mr. President, for giving me this chance.
Let me speak with you actually of a friend of mine. At the age of 12,
this friend — she dropped out of school and underwent genital
mutilation. In my community, after undergoing such this, the
(inaudible) said, she is ready for marriage. She was married to a man
older than her, twice her age. And now at the age of 15, she has three
children. She’s not able to care for them, for their education. She
milks the cows in the morning and sells the milk so that she can have
something to give to her children.
For me, I got an opportunity to be at a boarding school in Kakenya
Center. I had all the chance to study and I had all the time. I learned
to milk the cows for my mom and prepare my siblings to go back to
school. But now I’m studying in Pangani Girls, and become the first
girl in the center. And now I would like to be a cardiologist and study
at Harvard University. (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: That sounds good.
MS. MOMPOSHI: And also I would like to set an example to the girls
in my community that a girl
can really become a cardiologist. Thank
you. (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: That’s wonderful. Linet, hold on. You were so
inspiring. Give Linet the mic back. (Laughter.) Linet, how old are
you right now?
MS. MOMPOSHI: I’m 16 years old.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: You’re 16 years old. And how did you come to be able to go to the boarding school?
MS. MOMPOSHI: I was helped by Kakenya, the Kakenya Center. And
that’s how I go to study in Kakenya Center. And my dreams started
working in that center where I had a chance to go to Maryhill but I went
to Pangani Girls.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: So there was a center there, and by you coming into
the center, then you started having bigger dreams about what you might
be able to do?
MS. MOMPOSHI: Okay, I never used to have big dreams like now.
Before joining the center, I never knew what I was going to do because I
never had any hope in life.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Yes. So, Linet, I’m sure you’re going to be an
excellent cardiologist. (Laughter.) So we’re very proud of you. But
it just sends a message in terms of why civil society is so important.
So many of our young people who have a lot of talent, but they just
don’t know what’s possible. And sometimes the most important thing is
just to show them that this is what could happen in your life if you
work hard. And when they have a vision about what could happen, then
suddenly they’re motivated, the same way that Linet is motivated. And
she stars having bigger ambitions about what’s possible.
That’s part of the reason why civil society organizations that create
mentorship programs and programs for young people to interact in
different professions and talk to people who have succeeded is so
important. And in fact, in the United States I’ve set up something
called My Brother’s Keeper, designed to target disadvantaged youth so
that they are connected to mentorship programs very similar to some of
the work that resulted in Linet being inspired.
In fact, we have young people who are mentors at the White House and
we connect them with all of our senior staff. And I have dinner with
them and give them advice. I don’t know if they listen to the advice,
but I think they do. (Laughter.)
Linet, you’re a very find young woman. Congratulations. We’re very proud of you. (Applause.)
So one of the issues, obviously, that’s been of concern lately in
Kenya is terrorism. This is an area where I’m working extensively with
the government. This is something that we’re concerned about
internationally. And obviously given what happened in places like
Westgate and Garissa, Kenya is a source of concern as well. But as I
said in the press conference yesterday, one of the important lessons
that we’ve learned is that you can’t just fight terrorism through
military and the police. You also have to change people’s hearts and
minds, and give them a sense that they’re included in the society and
enlist them in assisting in fighting against terrorism.
And so I actually think that it’s important to include civil society
in the fight against terrorism. That’s what we’re doing in the United
States. That’s what we need to do here in Kenya as well. And so we’ve
got a couple of organizations that are here that I want to call on just
to talk about the kind of work they’re doing and what they’re finding on
the ground in dealing with this very important issue.
And I’m going to start with Hassan Ole Nado, who is with SUPKEM.
He’s the deputy secretary general — which is a very important title.
(Laughter.) But, please, go ahead. And describe for us what SUPKEM
does. Is it regionally located? Is it national? Or is it more along
the coast? Tell me about what it’s doing.
MR. OLE NADO: Thank you, Mr. President, for this opportunity and
also for having time with civil society in Kenya. The Supreme Council of
Kenya Muslims is an umbrella organization of Muslim organizations in
the country, particularly mosque and Muslim committees all over the
country. And also, we now have community-based organizations that are
working at the community level, but they found time to advocate and to
be part of the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims.
We are here, and we have been doing this work for the last two years
because we are a little bit late in the journey, but we realize that
it’s very important for the community to be engaged. We have worked
before by developing a Countering Violent Extremism advocacy chapter.
That calls for community leaderships, calls for government engagement,
and also brings other civil society organizations on board so that we can
be able to deal with this issue.
As you have already said, terrorism is not about military or the
police or other things. It’s more of community issues. So it has both
security and social aspect of it. And I really thank you because of the
White House summit, which I was privileged to attend with Hussein
Khalid of Haki Africa. And after that particular meeting, when we came
back to Kenya we found an opportunity to engage with government.
Because before that White House summit, the engagement or relationship
between civil society was a little bit lower. But thanks to that
conference, that really opened up the government to engage with civil
society.
Through that meeting, actually, we have been able, as civil society,
to engage government in the development of a national counter-violent
extremism strategy. And I hope the government will (inaudible) the
strategy very soon.
We know a number of organizations who have been involved in this part
of community projects, like Haki Africa and MUHURI are currently facing
some problems. And I hope through your engagement with the government,
you’d be able to raise concerns of these institutions. I know that the
American government cannot engage organizations that have relationships
with terrorist organizations. And I that is one of the things that
really think it is important to protect institutions or individuals who
engaged in this particular work.
At the moment, we are also working with the returnees in this country
— we have young men and women who are somehow misadvised and found
themselves in terrorist organizations. They found a way of getting back
to their country, and there are not clear ways of engagement. I work
with the government of Kenya because they gave amnesty to those who are
willing to be given the amnesty.
At the moment, we are really engaging
them, and the government is also opening up — because at the moment now,
they are also creating what they call interagency coordination centers
at the county level where all arms of government are talking together
before they take actions against suspected terrorists.
The Muslim community, the leadership are also now onboard and they
are really working on the areas of counter-narrative, because there are
two narratives here. There is the ideological narrative and there is
the old narrative of marginalization and other aspects. We talk about
perceptions in the narrative of marginalization — they are real issues
that we are calling the government to address those issues.
One of the issues is the lack of identification documents for young
people. I think it is very important that that should too should be
addressed. We have a collapse of the education system in the northeast
because of terror organizations. And I hope, as struggle to find ways
and answers of how to deal with this problem, it is important for USAID,
which I know they’ve done quite a lot of work in this country, to
consider getting into education much more by engaging communities so
that communities can run community-based organization education systems
in the northeast so that we are avoid getting terrorists of tomorrow.
Because we have over 400,000 young children who are not going to school
because everybody else is pulled from there, from the region.
Maybe if I could speak for many days, but I really thank you for this
opportunity and also for having time with the civil society
organizations. (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Thank you. Before you give up the mic, let me just
ask you a question. I’m glad that because of the White House summit
that we had on countering violent extremism, that there was a more
constructive conversation that was taking place.
I think that point that you make is so important, which is reaching
young people early. What I hear you saying is, is that one of the
problems that exists in certain parts of the country now is because of
fear, in some cases, and some of the existing structures not operating
as well as they should, that you just have children who don’t have
access to educational resources and a structure, and then that makes
them more vulnerable to recruitment into an organization that can give
them some sense of purpose or meaning, even if it ends up being a very
negative one. Is that what’s I’m understanding?
MR. OLE NADO: Yes, it’s actually — that is what it is. Because
after the unfortunate terror attacks of Mandera, and later on the
university in Garissa, those who were targeted — because those are
targeting were doing it deliberately to create interreligious tension in
the country. So we have those people, who are non-Muslims from the
region, pulling out of the region because they feel it’s no longer safe
for them to remain in that region.
But by pulling out, the region has been exposed because it doesn’t
haven’t adequate resources to address this gap that has emanated. So to
me, I think one of the things that need to consider is we need to build
local organizations that can really break that gap at the community
level, it’s more sustainable because they’re communities at a lower
level.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Thank you. That’s very useful. Somebody else I
want to hear from is Fauzia Abdi Ali, who’s with Women International
Society.
MS. ABDI ALI: Thank you. I must start by congratulating you. The
speech was really, really good because it really advocated for issues of
women, which is an area of passion. I’m not speaking as WIS today, I’m
actually speaking as Sisters Without Borders, because I chair a
platform of very inspirational women who work every single day in the
field of peace and security, in particular countering violent extremism.
So the women come from different parts of the country — from northern
Kenya, from the coastal region, and even here in Nairobi. And now I
engage mentees all towards ensuring we have a peaceful society. We
empower women from the household level to understand prevention, to
understand early warning signs of radicalization of their kids, to look
at prevention towards stigma that is associated with those mothers whose
kids have actually joined violent extremism, or even their spouses. We
also look at empowering them through support groups where they can have
a space to engage with other like-minded people and even learn from
each other. And we also ensure that this cross-border engagement
between those within northern Kenya and those within the coastal region
so that they don’t feel alone in this whole concept of violent
extremism.
What is normally important for me is, when it comes to issues of
peace and security, engagement with women is still minimal, and we’re
still playing catchup. When we are pushing for two-thirds, even within
our own parliamentary systems, we are not looking at what these
two-thirds will be doing. And for us, we are pushing towards them
having some concrete things that they will talk about within parliament.
And in particular is the issue of education. Because for the women in
northern Kenya, their children are actually not going to school;
they’re not getting quality education. And as Hassan has said, this
ends up becoming a society that has young people who are not well
educated and are more susceptible to violent extremism.
Secondly, it’s the issue of the economy. In places such as the coast
region, this has affected the economy. And this trickles down to the
household level, and it affects the woman’s old economy within that
structure. So how can we have even this conversation going on? And we
try and link this to the national level.
We also ensure that these discussions around policy on prevention has
a gender lens. Because the reasons why boys join and the reason why
girls join is very different. But when we are searching for solutions
in policy, we try and group them together. So sometimes, even when we
are looking at issues of amnesty, we are not really opening up that
space to understand if we are going to put a rehabilitation center, how
do we make it different from when engaging with a boy and when engaging
with a girl. So that is very critical for us.
One key thing I would love to put across is you started the first —
the conversation — the White House conference in February, and it
brought a lot more conversation here through the regional conference we
had. And I wanted to elevate that. In terms of ensuring it’s more
sustainable so that it pushes away from just discussion is to push for a
hub that can be placed in Africa. The hub we have is actually in the
UAE, the United Arab Emirates — which is useful for research and
ensuring there’s more conversation around how private sector gets
involved, how civil society and governments can come together.
But we don’t have such hubs in Africa. So in most cases, when you
hear about capacity-building of CVE, we have to go outside Africa to get
this capacity-building. So why not actually start thinking about
either expanding the global center to have a hub in Kenya, or somewhere
in Africa for easy access for even the grassroots initiatives and civil
society to also be engaged.
Thank you. (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Thank you. That was an excellent presentation. Thank you.
And I will very much take your remarks under advisement in terms of
the possibilities of setting up a hub. The idea of women being actively
engaged in countering violent extremism is absolutely critical.
Mothers tend to be more sensible. (Laughter.) I’m just telling the
truth. (Laughter and applause.) And obviously the younger we’re
reaching children and giving them the sense that violence is not the
right path, and that’s being reinforced by their primary caregiver,
which typically is the mother, and the idea of peer-to-peer support but
also some peer pressure in terms of making sure that mothers are
involved in steering their children in the right way — I think that’s a
wonderful model. Very exciting. I just learned something there.
So I’ve got a little bit more time. What I’d like to do now is I’m
just going to call on some people. But I’m not going to be able to call
on everybody, so I just want to say in advance. But I’m going to start
with this young lady right there, in the sweater. And please introduce
yourself.
Q Thank you, Mr. President. I am the CEO for Kamak (ph) Girls
Initiative. Kamak Girls came about because of a problem — I came from a
family that had 45 children; out of it, 35 who are living. Out of the
35, 20 were girls, 15 were boys. And out of the 20 girls, only 11 went
to school, four of them up to secondary, and one now up to the PhD
level. So my father was really for education. He really tried his
best. But when he passed away in 2004, I realized as a bigger girl,
number three, that I had work to do — follow these girls who dropped out
of school and see that they can live a more meaningful life towards
education, health and economic development.
So I gathered the four girls who are with me, and we started visiting
them and find out how they are living. Right now, I managed with my
three sisters to take two to the university. One has completed and has
gotten a job. One is in third form. Two to diploma level; one of them
we pushed and we opened at a city school where she was married. And the
other one went to forest school. And to point, one of them where she
was staying, she reached a class 8 and she has opened an inner-city
school.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Excellent.
Q Our next step is to evaluate — when we evaluate, we get girls of
their range so that they can see what these girls have done, and also
help the girls in the particular area.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Okay.
Q Yes. And apart from that, I’ve worked for 34 years, but I’ve
not gone very far because I started building our children from the
(inaudible) and I started working and continue to. I have three
children. They have not gone very far because I’m taking care of these
people.
So my request is that this group can move further so that whenever
these girls are married, I can — not only those girls of ours, but also
the girls in that area can also see that they can do it. Thank you so
much. (Applause.)
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Okay. Well, thank you for your good efforts.
This young lady right there. I ask everybody to try to be as brief
as possible so I can get as many additional question as possible.
Q Thank you very much, Mr. President. I am here on behalf of the
Devolution Forum. That’s a civil society coalition that was set up
early last year because we were very concerned about challenges to the
implementation of devolution in Kenya. And so I’ll speak to just, very
briefly, four points. I have a more comprehensive memorandum.
But one is, we’re very concerned about the structure development
assistance on devolution. A lot of it is being channeled through the
national government to go to the county governments, and this is
contrary to the constitution which recognizes the two levels of
government as having shared serenity.
Now, this is a ploy by the government to keep power centralized.
It’s really a method of controlling the governance structure. So we
find that even with the U.S., some of your programs are being channeled
in this way, through the national government, for the county government.
And we find that this is bad for devolution. We find also the World
Bank very much is channeling — they are funding in this direction.
The other thing that I’d like to address is — to do with the war on
terror. We’ve noted that this an intergovernmental aspect to the war on
terror. And because the security reforms have not been implemented to
the pace that was supposed to be, we find that these intergovernmental
institutions, such as the county policing authorities, the community
policing, ideologically and even structurally have not been set up.
Ideologically, we find that they are being taken as more
information-gathering rather than community policing where communities
get actively involved in their community policing. So we are very
concerned that as the U.S. assists the U.S. government, are you going to
look at the ideological foundations of the structures that will engage
citizens and the country governments in the security process? Because
if we don’t do that, then it will undermine the war on terror and
security.
I’ll pick one more because I –
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Because you’re running out of time.
Q I’m out of time. (Laughter.) There’s a trend in Africa where
the civic space is being closed. And we’re looking at countries like
Rwanda, Ethiopia. We’re looking at our country. And we’re wondering,
what’s the response of the U.S. government? We heard your excellent
remarks and sentiments, but of course you are working with a government
that has demonstrated an intent to close the civic space. So what’s
your approach going to be as you consolidate your work with the Kenyan
government in terms of supporting civil society? We’re finding even
support for civil society is not as rigorous as it should have been.
Thank you.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, those are all excellent remarks. Let me just
broadly talk about devolution and then we’ll talk about how we are
interacting with the national government on civil society issues.
With respect to devolution, Kenya now has a constitution and it has
laid out how devolution is supposed to proceed. That will be subject to
interpretation and legal challenges and political arguments. That’s
probably not an issue that the United States will be weighing in on
deeply. And the reason I say that is because we have a system of
government with a national — or federal government, and then state
governments and then local governments. And the relationship between
the federal government and the states, the relationship between federal
law and local laws is extremely complicated and has been the source of
constant democratic debate, argument, challenges, court cases. And
that’s been going on for 250 years now. I mean, that was part of the
original issue in the formation of the United States of America — how
much power remained with the states and how much power went to the
federal government.
So the challenge that we would have as an international — or as an
outside party as the United States of America is that how that plays
itself out within Kenya is ultimately up to the Kenyan people. Because
there are arguments actually on both sides when it comes to national
versus state power. In the United States, for example, those who wanted
to maintain racial segregation consistently used the argument that
states have the right to do what they want, and the federal government
doesn’t have the authority to enforce civil rights laws that are
discriminating against minorities at the state level.
And I actually think, in that situation, the national government
needed to say to states that had segregation laws — you have to stop.
And national law and the rights of individuals that are in the bill of
rights are superior to whatever challenges — or whatever claims are
being made for states’ rights.
Now, on the other hand, there are times where the national government
is involving itself in states unnecessarily, and imposing views that
may not be properly adapted to the local region.
So I guess what I’m saying is, is that that’s an issue that’s — it
would be very difficult for us as outsiders to try to figure out. What
we can do is to say, consistent with democracy, you have a constitution;
you should abide by what’s in your constitution. And you can make your
own decisions about the systems that you want to arrange and the
balance between federal and state power, or local power or counties.
And as long as it’s proceeding in a legal process consistent with the
constitution, we’re okay with that.
So I just wanted to be honest, that’s not probably an issue where I’m
going to be asking the ambassador of the United States to get deeply
involved in because it’s just too complicated. Every country is going
to be different in terms of finding that balance.
Now, the issue of civil society is different, because we do believe
that if you have laws that restrict people’s ability to organize and
speak out peacefully, and participate in their government and petition
their government — if those become too restrictive, then that, in any
society, contradicts the basic premise of democracy.
And I recognize that there have been some concerns about some of the
laws that have either been proposed or are being interpreted in ways
that appear to restrict the legality of certain activities by certain
groups. Rather than to say specifically what we’re for and against —
because frankly, I don’t know all the details — what I will say is this:
We will look suspiciously on laws that say certain peaceful groups
can’t operate just because they might be critical of the government, for
example. I mean, our bias as a country and in our foreign policy is to
say that if a group is peacefully organizing and advocating for issues,
that they should be able to do so without excessive government
interference. Now, if the groups are violent, then that’s a different
issue.
But you heard me in my press conference yesterday — I don’t
counterterrorism to be used as an excuse then to crush legitimate
dissent. And we will guard against that as well.
So we have every intention to work on a whole range of common
interests with the Kenyan government. There are areas where we have a
complete agreement, and we will work through the Kenyan government in
order to accomplish those common goals. We want to be helpful and
supportive of the national agenda, but we’ll also be working with NGOs
and local organizations at the local level. Many of the organizations
that area we have been supporting. And what we’ll do is we’ll make sure
that in all of our interactions and engagements with the government,
when we see an organization, for example, that we have determined is, in
fact, legitimate and is peaceful, that it is in some ways being
suppressed, we will speak up and we’ll be very clear about it. So we’re
going to be engaged, we’re going to be involved.
But as I was telling — I met with some of the opposition leaders very
briefly — those who are not in government — after the speech. And I
told them, you have a legally elected government and we’re going to work
with that government, but we’re also always going to be listening to
all elements of Kenyan society. It was funny, though — one of the
opposition leaders — I won’t mention who — was saying, you know, we
really need you to press the Kenyan government on some issues. And I
had to say to him, I said, I remember when you were in government —
(laughter) — you kept on saying, why are you trying to interfere with
Kenya’s business; you should mind your own business. (Laughter.)
So everybody wants the United States to be very involved when they’re
not in power. And when they’re in power, they want the United States
to mind their own business.
I think the way that we are going to operate is just to continue to
be honest and to promote the kinds of policies and interests that we
believe in. But ultimately — and this is probably a good way to close —
ultimately I just want to remind everybody that Kenya’s prosperity, its
freedom, its opportunity, the strength of its democracy is going to
depend on Kenyans. It’s not going to depend on somebody else.
There was a time, post-Colonial, Cold War, when the big major powers
were constantly interfering and determining what was happening in other
countries. And frankly, the United States sometimes was involved in
trying to decide who should be in charge of countries. But that
honestly has changed. Our policy is to respect the sovereignty of
nations and to recognize that it’s ultimately up to the people of those
countries to determine who leads them and their form of government. But
we are not going to apologize for believing in certain values and
ideals. And I may interact with a government, out of necessity, where
we have common interests. But if there are areas where I disagree, I
will also be very blunt in my disagreement. And that’s true whether
it’s Russia or China, or some of our European friends, or a great friend
like Kenya.
The good news is that, over all, the United States and Kenya have so
much in common, so much shared history, such strong people-to-people
ties, that the disagreements we have, regardless of who’s in power, tend
to be far fewer than all the areas where we have work to do together.
But I’m very encouraged to see that we’ve got such a strong civil
society that’s going to help move Kenya forward, and also help create a
stronger relationship between the United States and Kenya for years to
come.
So thank you for being here. This was a great conversation. (Applause.)
END
2:55 P.M. EAT
Thursday, July 30, 2015
President Obama’s Speech to the People of Kenya
President Barack Obama delivers a speech at Safaricom Indoor
Arena, Sunday, July 26, 2015, in Nairobi. On the final day of his visit
in Kenya, Obama laid out his vision for Kenya’s future, and broad themes
of U.S.-Kenya relations. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
July 26, 2015
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA TO THE KENYAN PEOPLE
Safaricom Indoor Arena
Nairobi, Kenya
12:00 P.M. EAT
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Hey!
AUDIENCE: Hey!
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Habari Zenu! (Applause.) Wakenya mpo? (Applause.) It is great to be back in Kenya. Thank you so much for this extraordinary welcome. I know it took a few years, but as President I try to keep my promises, and I said I was going to come, and I’m here. (Applause.)
Everybody, go ahead and have a seat. I’m going to be talking for a while. (Laughter.) Relax.
I want to thank my sister, Auma, for a wonderful introduction. I’m so glad that she could be with us here today. And it was — as she said, it was Auma who first guided me through Kenya almost 30 years ago.
To President Kenyatta, I want to thank you once again for the hospitality that you’ve shown to me — (applause) — and for our work together on this visit, and for being here today. It’s a great honor.
I am proud to be the first American President to come to Kenya — (applause) — and, of course, I’m the first Kenyan-American to be President of the United States. (Laughter and applause.) That goes without saying.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: I love you, Obama!
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I love you back. (Applause.) I do.
But, as Auma was saying, the first time I came to Kenya, things were a little different. When I arrived at Kenyatta Airport, the airline lost my bags. (Laughter.) That doesn’t happen on Air Force One. (Laughter.) They always have my luggage on Air Force One. (Laughter.) As she said, Auma picked me up in an old Volkswagon Beetle, and think the entire stay I was here it broke down four or five times. (Laughter.) We’d be on the highway, we’d have to call the juakali — he’d bring us tools. We’d be sitting there, waiting. And I slept on a cot in her apartment. Instead of eating at fancy banquets with the President, we were drinking tea and eating Ugali — (laughter) — and Sukumawiki.
So there wasn’t a lot of luxury. Sometimes the lights would go out. They still do — is that what someone said? (Laughter.) But there was something more important than luxury on that first trip, and that was a sense of being recognized, being seen. I was a young man and I was just a few years out of University. I had worked as a community organizer in low-income neighborhoods in Chicago. I was about to go to law school. And when I came here, in many ways I was a Westerner, I was an American, unfamiliar with my father and his birthplace, really disconnected from half of my heritage. And at that airport, as I was trying to find my luggage, there was a woman there who worked for the airlines, and she was helping fill out the forms, and she saw my name and she looked up and she asked if I was related to my father, who she had known. And that was the first time that my name meant something. (Applause.) And that was recognized.
And over the course of several weeks, I’d meet my brothers and aunts and uncles. I traveled to Alego, the village where my family was from. I saw the graves of my father and my grandfather. And I learned things about their lives that I could have never learned through books. And in many ways, their lives offered snapshots of Kenya’s history, but they also told us something about the future.
My grandfather, for example, he was a cook for the British. And as I went through some of his belongings when I went up-country, I found the passbook he had had to carry as a domestic servant. It listed his age and his height, his tribe, listed the number of teeth he had missing. (Laughter.) And he was referred to as a boy, even though he was a grown man, in that passbook.
And he was in the King’s African Rifles during the Second World War, and was taken to the far reaches of the British Empire — all the way to Burma. And back home after the war, he was eventually detained for a time because he was linked to a group that opposed British rule. And eventually he was released. He forged a home for himself and his family. He earned the respect of his village, lived a life of dignity — although he had a well-earned reputation for being so strict that everybody was scared of him and he became estranged from part of his family.
So that was his story. And then my father came of age as Kenyans were pursuing independence, and he was proud to be a part of that liberation generation. And next to my grandfather’s papers, I found letters that he had written to 30 American universities asking for a chance to pursue his dream and get a scholarship. And ultimately, one university gave him that chance — the University in Hawaii. And he would go on to get an education and then return home.
And here, at first he found success as an economist and worked with the government. But ultimately, he found disappointment — in part because he couldn’t reconcile the ideas that he had for his young country with the hard realities that had confronted him.
And I think sometimes about what these stories tell us, what the history and the past tell us about the future. They show the enormous barriers to progress that so many Kenyans faced just one or two generations ago. This is a young country. We were talking last night at dinner — the President’s father was the first President. We’re only a generation removed. And the daily limitations — and sometimes humiliations — of colonialism — that’s recent history. The corruption and cronyism and tribalism that sometimes confront young nations — that’s recent history.
But what these stories also tell us is an arch of progress — from foreign rule to independence; from isolation to education, and engagement with a wider world. It speaks of incredible progress. So we have to know the history of Kenya, just as we Americans have to know our American history. All people have to understand where they come from. But we also have to remember why these lessons are important.
We know a history so that we can learn from it. We learn our history because we understand the sacrifices that were made before, so that when we make sacrifices we understand we’re doing it on behalf of future generations.
There’s a proverb that says, “We have not inherited this land from our forebears, we have borrowed it from our children.” In other words, we study the past so it can guide us into the future, and inspire us to do better.
And when it comes to the people of Kenya — particularly the youth — I believe there is no limit to what you can achieve. A young, ambitious Kenyan today should not have to do what my grandfather did, and serve a foreign master. You don’t need to do what my father did, and leave your home in order to get a good education and access to opportunity. Because of Kenya’s progress, because of your potential, you can build your future right here, right now. (Applause.)
Now, like any country, Kenya is far from perfect, but it has come so far in just my lifetime. After a bitter struggle, Kenyans claimed their independence just a few years after I was born. And after decades of one party-rule, Kenya embraced a multi-party system in the 1990s, just as I was beginning my own political career in the United States.
Tragically, just under a decade ago, Kenya was nearly torn apart by violence at the same time that I was running for my first campaign for President. And I remember hearing the reports of thousands of innocent people being killed or driven from their homes. And from a distance, it seemed like the Kenya that I knew — a Kenya that was able to reach beyond ethnic and tribal lines — that it might split apart across those lines of tribe and ethnicity.
But look what happened. The people of Kenya chose not to be defined by the hatreds of the past — you chose a better history. (Applause.) The voices of ordinary people, and political leaders and civil society did not eliminate all these divisions, but you addressed the divisions and differences peacefully. And a new constitution was put in place, declaring that “every person has inherent dignity — and the right to have that dignity respected and protected.” A competitive election went forward — not without problems, but without the violence that so many had feared. In other words, Kenyans chose to stay together. You chose the path of Harambee. (Applause.)
And in part because of this political stability, Kenya’s economy is also emerging — and the entrepreneurial spirit that people rely on to survive in the streets of Kibera can now be seen in new businesses across the country. (Applause.) From the city square to the smallest villages, MPesa is changing the way people use money. New investment is making Kenya a hub for regional trade. When I came here as a U.S. senator, I pointed out that South Korea’s economy was the same as Kenya’s when I was born, and then was 40 times larger than Kenya’s. Think about that. It started at the same place — South Korea had gone here, and Kenya was here. But today, that gap has been cut in half just in the last decade. (Applause.) Which means Kenya is making progress.
And meanwhile, Kenya continues to carve out a distinct place in the community of nations: As a source of peacekeepers for places torn apart by conflict, a host for refugees driven from their homes. A leader for conservation, following the footprints of Wangari Maathai. (Applause.) Kenya is one of the places on this continent that truly observes freedom of the press, and their fearless journalists and courageous civil society members. And in the United States, we see the legacy of Kip Keino every time a Kenyan wins one of our marathons. (Applause.) And maybe the First Lady of Kenya is going to win one soon. (Laughter and applause.) I told the President he has to start running with his wife. (Laughter.) We want him to stay fit. (Laughter.)
So there’s much to be proud of — much progress to lift up. It’s a good-news story. But we also know the progress is not complete. There are still problems that shadow ordinary Kenyans every day — challenges that can deny you your livelihood, and sometimes deny you lives.
As in America — and so many countries around the globe — economic growth has not always been broadly shared. Sometimes people at the top do very well, but ordinary people still struggle. Today, a young child in Nyanza Province is four times more likely to die than a child in Central Province — even though they are equal in dignity and the eyes of God. That’s a gap that has to be closed. (Applause.) A girl in Rift Valley is far less likely to attend secondary school than a girl in Nairobi. That’s a gap that has to be closed. (Applause.) Across the country, one study shows corruption costs Kenyans 250,000 jobs every year — because every shilling that’s paid as a bribe could be put into the pocket of somebody who’s actually doing an honest day’s work. (Applause.)
And despite the hard-earned political progress that I spoke of, those political gains still have to be protected. New laws and restrictions could close off the space where civil society gives individual citizens a voice and holds leaders accountable. Old tribal divisions and ethnic divisions can still be stirred up. I want to be very clear here — a politics that’s based solely on tribe and ethnicity is a politics that’s doomed to tear a country apart. (Applause.) It is a failure — a failure of imagination.
Of course, here, in Kenya, we also know the specter of terrorism has touched far too many lives. And we remember the Americans and Kenyans who died side by side in the attack on our embassy in the ‘90s. We remember the innocent Kenyans who were taken from us at Westgate Mall. We weep for the nearly 150 people slaughtered at Garissa — including so many students who had such a bright future before them. We honor the memory of so many other innocent Kenyans whose lives have been lost in this struggle.
So Kenya is at a crossroads — a moment filled with peril, but also enormous promise. And with the rest of my time here today, I’d like to talk about how you can seize the moment, how you can make sure we leave behind a world that’s better — a world that we borrowed from our children.
When I first came to sub-Saharan Africa as President, I made clear my strong belief that the future of Africa is up to Africans. (Applause.) For too long, I think that many looked to the outside for salvation and focused on somebody else being at fault for the problems of the continent. And as my sister said, ultimately we are each responsible for our own destiny. And I’m here as President of a country that sees Kenya as an important partner. (Applause.) I’m here as a friend who wants Kenya to succeed.
And the pillars of that success are clear: Strong democratic governance; development that provides opportunity for all people and not just some; a sense of national identity that rejects conflict for a future of peace and reconciliation.
And today, we can see that future for Kenya on the horizon. But tough choices are going to have to be made in order to arrive at that destination. In the United States, I always say that what makes America exceptional is not the fact that we’re perfect, it’s the fact that we struggle to improve. We’re self-critical. We work to live up to our highest values and ideals, knowing that we’re not always going to achieve them perfectly, but we keep on trying to perfect our union.
And what’s true for America is also true for Kenya. You can’t be complacent and accept the world just as it is. You have to imagine what the world might be and then push and work toward that future. Progress requires that you honestly confront the dark corners of our own past; extend rights and opportunities to more of your citizens; see the differences and diversity of this country as a strength, just as we in America try to see the diversity of our country as a strength and not a weakness. So you can choose the path to progress, but it requires making some important choices.
First and foremost, it means continuing down the path of a strong, more inclusive, more accountable and transparent democracy. (Applause.)
Democracy begins with a peacefully-elected government. It begins with elections. But it doesn’t stop with elections. (Applause.) So your constitution offers a road map to governance that’s more responsive to the people — through protections against unchecked power, more power in the hands of local communities. For this system to succeed, there also has to be space for citizens to exercise their rights.
And we saw the strength of Kenya’s civil society in the last election, when groups collected reports of incitement so that violence could be stopped before it spun out of control. And the ability of citizens to organize and advocate for change — that’s the oxygen upon which democracy depends.
Democracy is sometimes messy, and for leaders, sometimes it’s frustrating. Democracy means that somebody is always complaining about something. (Laughter.) Nobody is ever happy in a democracy about their government. If you make one person happy, somebody else is unhappy. Then sometimes somebody who you made happy, later on, now they’re not happy. (Laughter.) They say, what have you done for me lately? (Laughter.) But that’s the nature of democracy. That’s why it works, is because it’s constantly challenging leaders to up their game and to do better.
And such civic participation and freedom is also essential for rooting out the cancer of corruption. Now, I want to be clear. Corruption is not unique to Kenya. (Laughter.) I mean, I want everybody to understand that there’s no country that’s completely free of corruption. Certainly here in the African continent there are many countries that deal with this problem. And I want to assure you I speak about it wherever I go, not just here in Kenya. So I don’t want everybody to get too sensitive. (Laughter.)
But the fact is, too often, here in Kenya — as is true in other places — corruption is tolerated because that’s how things have always been done. People just think that that is sort of the normal state of affairs. And there was a time in the United States where that was true, too. My hometown of Chicago was infamous for Al Capone and the Mob and organized crime corrupting law enforcement. But what happened was that over time people got fed up, and leaders stood up and they said, we’re not going to play that game anymore. (Applause.) And you changed a culture and you changed habits.
Here in Kenya, it’s time to change habits, and decisively break that cycle. Because corruption holds back every aspect of economic and civil life. It’s an anchor that weighs you down and prevents you from achieving what you could. If you need to pay a bribe and hire somebody’s brother — who’s not very good and doesn’t come to work — in order to start a business, well, that’s going to create less jobs for everybody. If electricity is going to one neighborhood because they’re well-connected, and not another neighborhood, that’s going to limit development of the country as a whole. (Applause.) If someone in public office is taking a cut that they don’t deserve, that’s taking away from those who are paying their fair share.
So this is not just about changing one law — although it’s important to have laws on the books that are actually being enforced. It’s important that not only low-level corruption is punished, but folks at the top, if they are taking from the people, that has to be addressed as well. (Applause.) But it’s not something that is just fixed by laws, or that any one person can fix. It requires a commitment by the entire nation — leaders and citizens — to change habits and to change culture. (Applause.)
Tough laws need to be on the books. And the good news is, your government is taking some important steps in the right direction. People who break the law and violate the public trust need to be prosecuted. NGOs have to be allowed to operate who shine a spotlight on what needs to change. And ordinary people have to stand up and say, enough is enough. (Applause.) It’s time for a better future.
And as you take these steps, I promise that America will continue to be your partner in supporting investments in strong, democratic institutions. (Applause.)
Now, we’re also going to work with you to pursue the second pillar of progress, and that is development that extends economic opportunity and dignity for all of Kenya’s people.
America partners with Kenya in areas where you’re making enormous progress, and we focus on what Kenyans can do for themselves and building capacity; on entrepreneurship, where Kenya is becoming an engine for innovation; on access to power, where Kenya is developing clean energy that can reach more people; on the important issue of climate change, where Kenya’s recent goal to reduce its emissions has put it in the position of being a leader on the continent; on food security, where Kenyan crops are producing more to meet the demands of your people and a global market; and on health, where Kenya has struck huge blows against HIV/AIDS and other diseases, while building up the capacity to provide better care in your communities.
America is also partnering with you on an issue that’s fundamental to Kenya’s future: We are investing in youth. (Applause.) We are investing in the young people of Kenya and the young people of this continent. Robert F. Kennedy once said, “It is a revolutionary world that we live in,” and “it is the young people who must take the lead.” (Applause.) It’s the young people who must take the lead.
So through our Young African Leaders Initiative — (applause) — we are empowering and connecting young people from across the continent who are filled with energy and optimism and idealism, and are going to take Africa to new heights. (Applause.) And these young people, they’re not weighted down by the old ways. They’re creating a new path. And these are the elements for success in this 21st century.
To continue down this path of progress, it will be vital for Kenya to recognize that no country can achieve its full potential unless it draws on the talents of all its people — and that must include the half of Kenyans — maybe a little more than half –who are women and girls. (Applause.) Now, I’m going to spend a little time on this just for a second. Every country and every culture has traditions that are unique and help make that country what it is. But just because something is a part of your past doesn’t make it right. It doesn’t mean that it defines your future.
Look at us in the United States. Recently, we’ve been having a debate about the Confederate flag. Some of you may be familiar with this. This was a symbol for those states who fought against the Union to preserve slavery. Now, as a historical artifact, it’s important. But some have argued that it’s just a symbol of heritage that should fly in public spaces. The fact is it was a flag that flew over an army that fought to maintain a system of slavery and racial subjugation. So we should understand our history, but we should also recognize that it sends a bad message to those who were liberated from slavery and oppression.
And in part because of an unspeakable tragedy that took place recently, where a young man who was a fan of the Confederate flag and racial superiority shot helpless people in a church, more and more Americans of all races are realizing now that that flag should come down. (Applause.) Just because something is a tradition doesn’t make it right.
Well, so around the world, there is a tradition of repressing women and treating them differently, and not giving them the same opportunities, and husbands beating their wives, and children not being sent to school. Those are traditions. Treating women and girls as second-class citizens, those are bad traditions. They need to change. (Applause.) They’re holding you back.
Treating women as second-class citizens is a bad tradition. It holds you back. (Applause.) There’s no excuse for sexual assault or domestic violence. There’s no reason that young girls should suffer genital mutilation. There’s no place in civilized society for the early or forced marriage of children. These traditions may date back centuries; they have no place in the 21st century. (Applause.)
These are issues of right and wrong — in any culture. But they’re also issues of success and failure. Any nation that fails to educate its girls or employ its women and allowing them to maximize their potential is doomed to fall behind in a global economy. (Applause.)
You know, we’re in a sports center. Imagine if you have a team and you don’t let half of the team play. (Laughter.) That’s stupid. (Laughter and applause.) That makes no sense. And the evidence shows that communities that give their daughters the same opportunities as their sons, they are more peaceful, they are more prosperous, they develop faster, they are more likely to succeed. (Applause.) That’s true in America. That’s true here in Kenya. It doesn’t matter.
And that’s why one of the most successful development policies you can pursue is giving girls and education, and removing the obstacles that stand between them and their dreams. And by the way, if you educate girls — they grow up to be moms — and they, because they’re educated, are more likely to produce educated children. (Applause.) So Kenya will not succeed if it treats women and girls as second-class citizens. I want to be very clear about that. (Applause.)
Now, this leads me to the third pillar of progress, and that’s choosing a future of peace and reconciliation.
There are real threats out there. President Kenyatta and I spent a lot of time discussing the serious threat from al-Shabaab that Kenya faces. The United States faces similar threats of terrorism. We are grateful for the sacrifices made by Kenyans on the front lines as part of AMISOM. (Applause.) We’re proud of the efforts that we’re making to strengthen Kenya’s capabilities through our new Security Governance Initiative. We’re going to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with you in this fight against terrorism for as long as it takes. (Applause.)
But, as I mentioned yesterday, it is important to remember that violent extremists want us to turn against one another. That’s what terrorists typically try to exploit. They know that they are a small minority; they know that they can’t win conventionally. So what they try to do is target societies where they can exploit divisions. That’s what happens in Iraq. That’s what happens around the world. That’s what happened in Northern Ireland. Terrorists who try to sow chaos, they must be met with force and they must also be met, though, with a forceful commitment to uphold the rule of law, and respect for human rights, and to treat everybody who’s peaceful and law-abiding fairly and equally. (Applause.)
Extremists who prey on distrust must be defeated by communities who stand together and stand for something different. And the most important example here is, is that the United States and Kenya both have Muslim minorities, but those minorities make enormous contributions to our countries. These are our brothers, they are our sisters. (Applause.) And so in both our countries, we have to reject calls that allow us to be divided.
This is true for any diverse society. And Kenya is rich with diversity — with many dozens of tribes and ethnicities, and languages and religious groups. And time and again, just as we’ve seen the dangers of religious or ethnic violence, we’ve seen that Kenya is stronger when Kenyans stand united — with a sense of national identity. That was the case on December 12, 1963, when cities and villages across this country celebrated the birth of a nation. It was true in 2010, when Kenya replaced the anarchy of ethnic violence with the order of a new constitution. (Applause.)
So we can all appreciate our own identities, our bloodlines, our beliefs, our backgrounds — that tapestry is what makes us who we are. But the history of Africa — which is both the cradle of human progress and a crucible of conflict — shows us that when define ourselves narrowly, in opposition to somebody just because they’re of a different tribe, or race, or religion — and we ignore who is a good person or a bad person, are they working hard or not, are they honest or not, are they peaceful or violent — when we start making distinctions solely based on status and not what people do, then we’re taking the wrong path and we inevitably suffer in the end. (Applause.)
This is why Martin Luther King called on people to be judged not by the color of their skin but the content of their character. (Applause.) And in the same way, people should not be judged by their last name, or their religious faith, but by their content of their character and how they behave. Are they good citizens? Are they good people?
In the United States, we embrace the motto: E Pluribus Unum. In Latin, that means, out of many, one. In Kenya, Harambee — we are in this together. Whatever the challenge, you will be stronger if you face it not as Christians or Muslims, Masai, Kikuyu, Luo, any other tribe — but as Kenyans. And ultimately, that unity is the source of strength that will empower you to seize this moment of promise. That’s what will help you root out corruption. (Applause.) That’s what will strengthen democratic institutions. That’s what will help you combat inequality. That’s what will help you extend opportunity, and educate youth, and face down threats, and embrace reconciliation.
So I want to say particularly to the young people here today, Kenya is on the move. Africa is on the move. You are poised to play a bigger role in this world — (applause) — as the shadows of the past are replaced by the light that you offer an increasingly interconnected world. And in the light of this new day, we have to learn to see ourselves in one another. We have to see that we are connected, our fates are bound together. Because, in the end, we’re all part of one tribe — the human tribe. (Applause.) And no matter who we are, or where we come from, or what we look like, or who we love, or what God we worship, we’re connected. Our fates are bound up with one another.
Kenya holds within it all that diversity. And with diversity, sometimes comes difficulty. But I look to Kenya’s future filled with hope. And I’m hopeful because of you, the people of Kenya, especially the young people.
There are some amazing examples of what’s going on right now with young people. I’m hopeful because of a young man named Richard Ruto Todosia. Richard helped build Yes Youth Can — I like the phrase, Yes Youth Can — (applause.) It became one of the most prominent civil society organizations in Kenya, with over one million members. And after the violence of 2007, 2008, Yes Youth Can stood up to incitement, helped bring opportunity to young people in places that were scarred by conflict. That’s the kind of young leadership that we need. (Applause.)
I’m hopeful because of a young woman named Josephine Kulea. (Applause.) So Josephine founded Samburu Girls Foundation. And she’s already helped to rescue over 1,000 girls from abuse and forced marriage, and helped place them in schools. (Applause.) A member of the Samburu tribe herself, she’s personally planned rescue missions to help girls as young as 6 years old. And she explains that, “The longer a girl is in school, everything for her — for her income, for her family, for this country — everything changes.” She gives me hope.
I’m hopeful because of a young woman named Jamila Abass. So Jamila founded Mfarm, which is a mobile platform that is already used by over 14,000 people across Kenya. Mfarm makes it easy for farmers to get information that lets them match their crops with what the market demands. And studies show that it can help farmers double their sales. So here’s what Jamila said: “I love Kenya because you feel you are home anywhere you go.”
Home anywhere you go — that’s the Kenya that welcomed me nearly 30 years ago as a young man. You helped make me feel at home. And standing here today as President of the United States, when I think about those young people and all the young people in attendance here, you still make me feel at home. (Applause.) And I’m confident that your future is going to be written across this country and across this continent by young people like you — young men and women who don’t have to struggle under a colonial power; who don’t have to look overseas to realize your dreams. Yes, you can realize your dreams right here, right now. (Applause.)
“We have not inherited this land from our forebears, we have borrowed it from our children.” So now is the time for us to do the hard work of living up to that inheritance; of building a Kenya where the inherent dignity of every person is respected and protected, and there’s no limit to what a child can achieve.
I am here to tell you that the United States of America will be a partner for you every step of the way. (Applause.)
God bless you. Thank you. Asante sana. (Applause.)
END
12:43 P.M. EAT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
July 26, 2015
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA TO THE KENYAN PEOPLE
Safaricom Indoor Arena
Nairobi, Kenya
12:00 P.M. EAT
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Hey!
AUDIENCE: Hey!
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Habari Zenu! (Applause.) Wakenya mpo? (Applause.) It is great to be back in Kenya. Thank you so much for this extraordinary welcome. I know it took a few years, but as President I try to keep my promises, and I said I was going to come, and I’m here. (Applause.)
Everybody, go ahead and have a seat. I’m going to be talking for a while. (Laughter.) Relax.
I want to thank my sister, Auma, for a wonderful introduction. I’m so glad that she could be with us here today. And it was — as she said, it was Auma who first guided me through Kenya almost 30 years ago.
To President Kenyatta, I want to thank you once again for the hospitality that you’ve shown to me — (applause) — and for our work together on this visit, and for being here today. It’s a great honor.
I am proud to be the first American President to come to Kenya — (applause) — and, of course, I’m the first Kenyan-American to be President of the United States. (Laughter and applause.) That goes without saying.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: I love you, Obama!
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I love you back. (Applause.) I do.
But, as Auma was saying, the first time I came to Kenya, things were a little different. When I arrived at Kenyatta Airport, the airline lost my bags. (Laughter.) That doesn’t happen on Air Force One. (Laughter.) They always have my luggage on Air Force One. (Laughter.) As she said, Auma picked me up in an old Volkswagon Beetle, and think the entire stay I was here it broke down four or five times. (Laughter.) We’d be on the highway, we’d have to call the juakali — he’d bring us tools. We’d be sitting there, waiting. And I slept on a cot in her apartment. Instead of eating at fancy banquets with the President, we were drinking tea and eating Ugali — (laughter) — and Sukumawiki.
So there wasn’t a lot of luxury. Sometimes the lights would go out. They still do — is that what someone said? (Laughter.) But there was something more important than luxury on that first trip, and that was a sense of being recognized, being seen. I was a young man and I was just a few years out of University. I had worked as a community organizer in low-income neighborhoods in Chicago. I was about to go to law school. And when I came here, in many ways I was a Westerner, I was an American, unfamiliar with my father and his birthplace, really disconnected from half of my heritage. And at that airport, as I was trying to find my luggage, there was a woman there who worked for the airlines, and she was helping fill out the forms, and she saw my name and she looked up and she asked if I was related to my father, who she had known. And that was the first time that my name meant something. (Applause.) And that was recognized.
And over the course of several weeks, I’d meet my brothers and aunts and uncles. I traveled to Alego, the village where my family was from. I saw the graves of my father and my grandfather. And I learned things about their lives that I could have never learned through books. And in many ways, their lives offered snapshots of Kenya’s history, but they also told us something about the future.
My grandfather, for example, he was a cook for the British. And as I went through some of his belongings when I went up-country, I found the passbook he had had to carry as a domestic servant. It listed his age and his height, his tribe, listed the number of teeth he had missing. (Laughter.) And he was referred to as a boy, even though he was a grown man, in that passbook.
And he was in the King’s African Rifles during the Second World War, and was taken to the far reaches of the British Empire — all the way to Burma. And back home after the war, he was eventually detained for a time because he was linked to a group that opposed British rule. And eventually he was released. He forged a home for himself and his family. He earned the respect of his village, lived a life of dignity — although he had a well-earned reputation for being so strict that everybody was scared of him and he became estranged from part of his family.
So that was his story. And then my father came of age as Kenyans were pursuing independence, and he was proud to be a part of that liberation generation. And next to my grandfather’s papers, I found letters that he had written to 30 American universities asking for a chance to pursue his dream and get a scholarship. And ultimately, one university gave him that chance — the University in Hawaii. And he would go on to get an education and then return home.
And here, at first he found success as an economist and worked with the government. But ultimately, he found disappointment — in part because he couldn’t reconcile the ideas that he had for his young country with the hard realities that had confronted him.
And I think sometimes about what these stories tell us, what the history and the past tell us about the future. They show the enormous barriers to progress that so many Kenyans faced just one or two generations ago. This is a young country. We were talking last night at dinner — the President’s father was the first President. We’re only a generation removed. And the daily limitations — and sometimes humiliations — of colonialism — that’s recent history. The corruption and cronyism and tribalism that sometimes confront young nations — that’s recent history.
But what these stories also tell us is an arch of progress — from foreign rule to independence; from isolation to education, and engagement with a wider world. It speaks of incredible progress. So we have to know the history of Kenya, just as we Americans have to know our American history. All people have to understand where they come from. But we also have to remember why these lessons are important.
We know a history so that we can learn from it. We learn our history because we understand the sacrifices that were made before, so that when we make sacrifices we understand we’re doing it on behalf of future generations.
There’s a proverb that says, “We have not inherited this land from our forebears, we have borrowed it from our children.” In other words, we study the past so it can guide us into the future, and inspire us to do better.
And when it comes to the people of Kenya — particularly the youth — I believe there is no limit to what you can achieve. A young, ambitious Kenyan today should not have to do what my grandfather did, and serve a foreign master. You don’t need to do what my father did, and leave your home in order to get a good education and access to opportunity. Because of Kenya’s progress, because of your potential, you can build your future right here, right now. (Applause.)
Now, like any country, Kenya is far from perfect, but it has come so far in just my lifetime. After a bitter struggle, Kenyans claimed their independence just a few years after I was born. And after decades of one party-rule, Kenya embraced a multi-party system in the 1990s, just as I was beginning my own political career in the United States.
Tragically, just under a decade ago, Kenya was nearly torn apart by violence at the same time that I was running for my first campaign for President. And I remember hearing the reports of thousands of innocent people being killed or driven from their homes. And from a distance, it seemed like the Kenya that I knew — a Kenya that was able to reach beyond ethnic and tribal lines — that it might split apart across those lines of tribe and ethnicity.
But look what happened. The people of Kenya chose not to be defined by the hatreds of the past — you chose a better history. (Applause.) The voices of ordinary people, and political leaders and civil society did not eliminate all these divisions, but you addressed the divisions and differences peacefully. And a new constitution was put in place, declaring that “every person has inherent dignity — and the right to have that dignity respected and protected.” A competitive election went forward — not without problems, but without the violence that so many had feared. In other words, Kenyans chose to stay together. You chose the path of Harambee. (Applause.)
And in part because of this political stability, Kenya’s economy is also emerging — and the entrepreneurial spirit that people rely on to survive in the streets of Kibera can now be seen in new businesses across the country. (Applause.) From the city square to the smallest villages, MPesa is changing the way people use money. New investment is making Kenya a hub for regional trade. When I came here as a U.S. senator, I pointed out that South Korea’s economy was the same as Kenya’s when I was born, and then was 40 times larger than Kenya’s. Think about that. It started at the same place — South Korea had gone here, and Kenya was here. But today, that gap has been cut in half just in the last decade. (Applause.) Which means Kenya is making progress.
And meanwhile, Kenya continues to carve out a distinct place in the community of nations: As a source of peacekeepers for places torn apart by conflict, a host for refugees driven from their homes. A leader for conservation, following the footprints of Wangari Maathai. (Applause.) Kenya is one of the places on this continent that truly observes freedom of the press, and their fearless journalists and courageous civil society members. And in the United States, we see the legacy of Kip Keino every time a Kenyan wins one of our marathons. (Applause.) And maybe the First Lady of Kenya is going to win one soon. (Laughter and applause.) I told the President he has to start running with his wife. (Laughter.) We want him to stay fit. (Laughter.)
So there’s much to be proud of — much progress to lift up. It’s a good-news story. But we also know the progress is not complete. There are still problems that shadow ordinary Kenyans every day — challenges that can deny you your livelihood, and sometimes deny you lives.
As in America — and so many countries around the globe — economic growth has not always been broadly shared. Sometimes people at the top do very well, but ordinary people still struggle. Today, a young child in Nyanza Province is four times more likely to die than a child in Central Province — even though they are equal in dignity and the eyes of God. That’s a gap that has to be closed. (Applause.) A girl in Rift Valley is far less likely to attend secondary school than a girl in Nairobi. That’s a gap that has to be closed. (Applause.) Across the country, one study shows corruption costs Kenyans 250,000 jobs every year — because every shilling that’s paid as a bribe could be put into the pocket of somebody who’s actually doing an honest day’s work. (Applause.)
And despite the hard-earned political progress that I spoke of, those political gains still have to be protected. New laws and restrictions could close off the space where civil society gives individual citizens a voice and holds leaders accountable. Old tribal divisions and ethnic divisions can still be stirred up. I want to be very clear here — a politics that’s based solely on tribe and ethnicity is a politics that’s doomed to tear a country apart. (Applause.) It is a failure — a failure of imagination.
Of course, here, in Kenya, we also know the specter of terrorism has touched far too many lives. And we remember the Americans and Kenyans who died side by side in the attack on our embassy in the ‘90s. We remember the innocent Kenyans who were taken from us at Westgate Mall. We weep for the nearly 150 people slaughtered at Garissa — including so many students who had such a bright future before them. We honor the memory of so many other innocent Kenyans whose lives have been lost in this struggle.
So Kenya is at a crossroads — a moment filled with peril, but also enormous promise. And with the rest of my time here today, I’d like to talk about how you can seize the moment, how you can make sure we leave behind a world that’s better — a world that we borrowed from our children.
When I first came to sub-Saharan Africa as President, I made clear my strong belief that the future of Africa is up to Africans. (Applause.) For too long, I think that many looked to the outside for salvation and focused on somebody else being at fault for the problems of the continent. And as my sister said, ultimately we are each responsible for our own destiny. And I’m here as President of a country that sees Kenya as an important partner. (Applause.) I’m here as a friend who wants Kenya to succeed.
And the pillars of that success are clear: Strong democratic governance; development that provides opportunity for all people and not just some; a sense of national identity that rejects conflict for a future of peace and reconciliation.
And today, we can see that future for Kenya on the horizon. But tough choices are going to have to be made in order to arrive at that destination. In the United States, I always say that what makes America exceptional is not the fact that we’re perfect, it’s the fact that we struggle to improve. We’re self-critical. We work to live up to our highest values and ideals, knowing that we’re not always going to achieve them perfectly, but we keep on trying to perfect our union.
And what’s true for America is also true for Kenya. You can’t be complacent and accept the world just as it is. You have to imagine what the world might be and then push and work toward that future. Progress requires that you honestly confront the dark corners of our own past; extend rights and opportunities to more of your citizens; see the differences and diversity of this country as a strength, just as we in America try to see the diversity of our country as a strength and not a weakness. So you can choose the path to progress, but it requires making some important choices.
First and foremost, it means continuing down the path of a strong, more inclusive, more accountable and transparent democracy. (Applause.)
Democracy begins with a peacefully-elected government. It begins with elections. But it doesn’t stop with elections. (Applause.) So your constitution offers a road map to governance that’s more responsive to the people — through protections against unchecked power, more power in the hands of local communities. For this system to succeed, there also has to be space for citizens to exercise their rights.
And we saw the strength of Kenya’s civil society in the last election, when groups collected reports of incitement so that violence could be stopped before it spun out of control. And the ability of citizens to organize and advocate for change — that’s the oxygen upon which democracy depends.
Democracy is sometimes messy, and for leaders, sometimes it’s frustrating. Democracy means that somebody is always complaining about something. (Laughter.) Nobody is ever happy in a democracy about their government. If you make one person happy, somebody else is unhappy. Then sometimes somebody who you made happy, later on, now they’re not happy. (Laughter.) They say, what have you done for me lately? (Laughter.) But that’s the nature of democracy. That’s why it works, is because it’s constantly challenging leaders to up their game and to do better.
And such civic participation and freedom is also essential for rooting out the cancer of corruption. Now, I want to be clear. Corruption is not unique to Kenya. (Laughter.) I mean, I want everybody to understand that there’s no country that’s completely free of corruption. Certainly here in the African continent there are many countries that deal with this problem. And I want to assure you I speak about it wherever I go, not just here in Kenya. So I don’t want everybody to get too sensitive. (Laughter.)
But the fact is, too often, here in Kenya — as is true in other places — corruption is tolerated because that’s how things have always been done. People just think that that is sort of the normal state of affairs. And there was a time in the United States where that was true, too. My hometown of Chicago was infamous for Al Capone and the Mob and organized crime corrupting law enforcement. But what happened was that over time people got fed up, and leaders stood up and they said, we’re not going to play that game anymore. (Applause.) And you changed a culture and you changed habits.
Here in Kenya, it’s time to change habits, and decisively break that cycle. Because corruption holds back every aspect of economic and civil life. It’s an anchor that weighs you down and prevents you from achieving what you could. If you need to pay a bribe and hire somebody’s brother — who’s not very good and doesn’t come to work — in order to start a business, well, that’s going to create less jobs for everybody. If electricity is going to one neighborhood because they’re well-connected, and not another neighborhood, that’s going to limit development of the country as a whole. (Applause.) If someone in public office is taking a cut that they don’t deserve, that’s taking away from those who are paying their fair share.
So this is not just about changing one law — although it’s important to have laws on the books that are actually being enforced. It’s important that not only low-level corruption is punished, but folks at the top, if they are taking from the people, that has to be addressed as well. (Applause.) But it’s not something that is just fixed by laws, or that any one person can fix. It requires a commitment by the entire nation — leaders and citizens — to change habits and to change culture. (Applause.)
Tough laws need to be on the books. And the good news is, your government is taking some important steps in the right direction. People who break the law and violate the public trust need to be prosecuted. NGOs have to be allowed to operate who shine a spotlight on what needs to change. And ordinary people have to stand up and say, enough is enough. (Applause.) It’s time for a better future.
And as you take these steps, I promise that America will continue to be your partner in supporting investments in strong, democratic institutions. (Applause.)
Now, we’re also going to work with you to pursue the second pillar of progress, and that is development that extends economic opportunity and dignity for all of Kenya’s people.
America partners with Kenya in areas where you’re making enormous progress, and we focus on what Kenyans can do for themselves and building capacity; on entrepreneurship, where Kenya is becoming an engine for innovation; on access to power, where Kenya is developing clean energy that can reach more people; on the important issue of climate change, where Kenya’s recent goal to reduce its emissions has put it in the position of being a leader on the continent; on food security, where Kenyan crops are producing more to meet the demands of your people and a global market; and on health, where Kenya has struck huge blows against HIV/AIDS and other diseases, while building up the capacity to provide better care in your communities.
America is also partnering with you on an issue that’s fundamental to Kenya’s future: We are investing in youth. (Applause.) We are investing in the young people of Kenya and the young people of this continent. Robert F. Kennedy once said, “It is a revolutionary world that we live in,” and “it is the young people who must take the lead.” (Applause.) It’s the young people who must take the lead.
So through our Young African Leaders Initiative — (applause) — we are empowering and connecting young people from across the continent who are filled with energy and optimism and idealism, and are going to take Africa to new heights. (Applause.) And these young people, they’re not weighted down by the old ways. They’re creating a new path. And these are the elements for success in this 21st century.
To continue down this path of progress, it will be vital for Kenya to recognize that no country can achieve its full potential unless it draws on the talents of all its people — and that must include the half of Kenyans — maybe a little more than half –who are women and girls. (Applause.) Now, I’m going to spend a little time on this just for a second. Every country and every culture has traditions that are unique and help make that country what it is. But just because something is a part of your past doesn’t make it right. It doesn’t mean that it defines your future.
Look at us in the United States. Recently, we’ve been having a debate about the Confederate flag. Some of you may be familiar with this. This was a symbol for those states who fought against the Union to preserve slavery. Now, as a historical artifact, it’s important. But some have argued that it’s just a symbol of heritage that should fly in public spaces. The fact is it was a flag that flew over an army that fought to maintain a system of slavery and racial subjugation. So we should understand our history, but we should also recognize that it sends a bad message to those who were liberated from slavery and oppression.
And in part because of an unspeakable tragedy that took place recently, where a young man who was a fan of the Confederate flag and racial superiority shot helpless people in a church, more and more Americans of all races are realizing now that that flag should come down. (Applause.) Just because something is a tradition doesn’t make it right.
Well, so around the world, there is a tradition of repressing women and treating them differently, and not giving them the same opportunities, and husbands beating their wives, and children not being sent to school. Those are traditions. Treating women and girls as second-class citizens, those are bad traditions. They need to change. (Applause.) They’re holding you back.
Treating women as second-class citizens is a bad tradition. It holds you back. (Applause.) There’s no excuse for sexual assault or domestic violence. There’s no reason that young girls should suffer genital mutilation. There’s no place in civilized society for the early or forced marriage of children. These traditions may date back centuries; they have no place in the 21st century. (Applause.)
These are issues of right and wrong — in any culture. But they’re also issues of success and failure. Any nation that fails to educate its girls or employ its women and allowing them to maximize their potential is doomed to fall behind in a global economy. (Applause.)
You know, we’re in a sports center. Imagine if you have a team and you don’t let half of the team play. (Laughter.) That’s stupid. (Laughter and applause.) That makes no sense. And the evidence shows that communities that give their daughters the same opportunities as their sons, they are more peaceful, they are more prosperous, they develop faster, they are more likely to succeed. (Applause.) That’s true in America. That’s true here in Kenya. It doesn’t matter.
And that’s why one of the most successful development policies you can pursue is giving girls and education, and removing the obstacles that stand between them and their dreams. And by the way, if you educate girls — they grow up to be moms — and they, because they’re educated, are more likely to produce educated children. (Applause.) So Kenya will not succeed if it treats women and girls as second-class citizens. I want to be very clear about that. (Applause.)
Now, this leads me to the third pillar of progress, and that’s choosing a future of peace and reconciliation.
There are real threats out there. President Kenyatta and I spent a lot of time discussing the serious threat from al-Shabaab that Kenya faces. The United States faces similar threats of terrorism. We are grateful for the sacrifices made by Kenyans on the front lines as part of AMISOM. (Applause.) We’re proud of the efforts that we’re making to strengthen Kenya’s capabilities through our new Security Governance Initiative. We’re going to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with you in this fight against terrorism for as long as it takes. (Applause.)
But, as I mentioned yesterday, it is important to remember that violent extremists want us to turn against one another. That’s what terrorists typically try to exploit. They know that they are a small minority; they know that they can’t win conventionally. So what they try to do is target societies where they can exploit divisions. That’s what happens in Iraq. That’s what happens around the world. That’s what happened in Northern Ireland. Terrorists who try to sow chaos, they must be met with force and they must also be met, though, with a forceful commitment to uphold the rule of law, and respect for human rights, and to treat everybody who’s peaceful and law-abiding fairly and equally. (Applause.)
Extremists who prey on distrust must be defeated by communities who stand together and stand for something different. And the most important example here is, is that the United States and Kenya both have Muslim minorities, but those minorities make enormous contributions to our countries. These are our brothers, they are our sisters. (Applause.) And so in both our countries, we have to reject calls that allow us to be divided.
This is true for any diverse society. And Kenya is rich with diversity — with many dozens of tribes and ethnicities, and languages and religious groups. And time and again, just as we’ve seen the dangers of religious or ethnic violence, we’ve seen that Kenya is stronger when Kenyans stand united — with a sense of national identity. That was the case on December 12, 1963, when cities and villages across this country celebrated the birth of a nation. It was true in 2010, when Kenya replaced the anarchy of ethnic violence with the order of a new constitution. (Applause.)
So we can all appreciate our own identities, our bloodlines, our beliefs, our backgrounds — that tapestry is what makes us who we are. But the history of Africa — which is both the cradle of human progress and a crucible of conflict — shows us that when define ourselves narrowly, in opposition to somebody just because they’re of a different tribe, or race, or religion — and we ignore who is a good person or a bad person, are they working hard or not, are they honest or not, are they peaceful or violent — when we start making distinctions solely based on status and not what people do, then we’re taking the wrong path and we inevitably suffer in the end. (Applause.)
This is why Martin Luther King called on people to be judged not by the color of their skin but the content of their character. (Applause.) And in the same way, people should not be judged by their last name, or their religious faith, but by their content of their character and how they behave. Are they good citizens? Are they good people?
In the United States, we embrace the motto: E Pluribus Unum. In Latin, that means, out of many, one. In Kenya, Harambee — we are in this together. Whatever the challenge, you will be stronger if you face it not as Christians or Muslims, Masai, Kikuyu, Luo, any other tribe — but as Kenyans. And ultimately, that unity is the source of strength that will empower you to seize this moment of promise. That’s what will help you root out corruption. (Applause.) That’s what will strengthen democratic institutions. That’s what will help you combat inequality. That’s what will help you extend opportunity, and educate youth, and face down threats, and embrace reconciliation.
So I want to say particularly to the young people here today, Kenya is on the move. Africa is on the move. You are poised to play a bigger role in this world — (applause) — as the shadows of the past are replaced by the light that you offer an increasingly interconnected world. And in the light of this new day, we have to learn to see ourselves in one another. We have to see that we are connected, our fates are bound together. Because, in the end, we’re all part of one tribe — the human tribe. (Applause.) And no matter who we are, or where we come from, or what we look like, or who we love, or what God we worship, we’re connected. Our fates are bound up with one another.
Kenya holds within it all that diversity. And with diversity, sometimes comes difficulty. But I look to Kenya’s future filled with hope. And I’m hopeful because of you, the people of Kenya, especially the young people.
There are some amazing examples of what’s going on right now with young people. I’m hopeful because of a young man named Richard Ruto Todosia. Richard helped build Yes Youth Can — I like the phrase, Yes Youth Can — (applause.) It became one of the most prominent civil society organizations in Kenya, with over one million members. And after the violence of 2007, 2008, Yes Youth Can stood up to incitement, helped bring opportunity to young people in places that were scarred by conflict. That’s the kind of young leadership that we need. (Applause.)
I’m hopeful because of a young woman named Josephine Kulea. (Applause.) So Josephine founded Samburu Girls Foundation. And she’s already helped to rescue over 1,000 girls from abuse and forced marriage, and helped place them in schools. (Applause.) A member of the Samburu tribe herself, she’s personally planned rescue missions to help girls as young as 6 years old. And she explains that, “The longer a girl is in school, everything for her — for her income, for her family, for this country — everything changes.” She gives me hope.
I’m hopeful because of a young woman named Jamila Abass. So Jamila founded Mfarm, which is a mobile platform that is already used by over 14,000 people across Kenya. Mfarm makes it easy for farmers to get information that lets them match their crops with what the market demands. And studies show that it can help farmers double their sales. So here’s what Jamila said: “I love Kenya because you feel you are home anywhere you go.”
Home anywhere you go — that’s the Kenya that welcomed me nearly 30 years ago as a young man. You helped make me feel at home. And standing here today as President of the United States, when I think about those young people and all the young people in attendance here, you still make me feel at home. (Applause.) And I’m confident that your future is going to be written across this country and across this continent by young people like you — young men and women who don’t have to struggle under a colonial power; who don’t have to look overseas to realize your dreams. Yes, you can realize your dreams right here, right now. (Applause.)
“We have not inherited this land from our forebears, we have borrowed it from our children.” So now is the time for us to do the hard work of living up to that inheritance; of building a Kenya where the inherent dignity of every person is respected and protected, and there’s no limit to what a child can achieve.
I am here to tell you that the United States of America will be a partner for you every step of the way. (Applause.)
God bless you. Thank you. Asante sana. (Applause.)
END
12:43 P.M. EAT
Advancing Democracy, Human Rights, Gender Equality, Wildlife Conservation, and Governance in Africa – Fact Sheet
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
July 26, 2015
FACT SHEET: Advancing Democracy, Human Rights, Gender Equality, Wildlife Conservation, and Governance in Africa
The United States is committed to supporting African countries’ efforts to strengthen democratic institutions, support civil society, advance gender equality, improve governance, and protect human rights. We view these efforts as priorities not just because they are vital by themselves, but also because good governance and human rights underpin sustainable economic growth and peaceful and just societies. The United States pursues these goals through our development assistance, high-level diplomatic engagement, partnership with like-minded stakeholders, and public diplomacy that engages directly with citizens across the continent. Several of President Obama’s signature initiatives directly promote and elevate inclusive, transparent, and democratic governance in Africa.
Our efforts include:
Promoting Inclusive, Transparent and Accountable Governance: The United States is committed to building more effective and legitimate state institutions and will continue to support African governments in promoting efficiency, accountability, transparency, and in combating corruption. Accountable and efficient institutions improve the delivery of public and social services and create an enabling environment for attracting investment.
• The Partnership on Illicit Finance, announced during the 2014 U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, brings African partners and the United States together to jointly address the generation and transfer of proceeds from corruption and other financial crimes. The United States and several African nations met in late June to discuss challenges in stemming corruption-related illicit finance in Africa, and several African countries – including Burkina Faso, Kenya, Mauritius, Liberia, Niger, and Senegal – recently announced their membership and a commitment to develop tailored national action plans by the end of the year.
• Since the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit in 2014, Cabo Verde has become the newest member of the Open Government Partnership (OGP), a global initiative launched by President Obama with seven other heads of state in 2011 to increase transparency, bolster citizen engagement, and harness new technologies to improve governance. Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Sierra Leone, Tanzania and South Africa are also OGP members, and continue to make good on their commitments to open government. Kenya is reinvigorating its process of consultations with civil society on OGP, Sierra Leone has launched an open data portal and established an Access to Information Commission, while in Sierra Leone five ministries have signed integrity pacts with their Anticorruption Commission to promote government transparency and accountability. Liberia has published and Malawi is close to releasing new national action plans. Mozambique and Niger recently became eligible to join OGP and Benin announced it will complete reforms to become OGP eligible by April 2016. The United States will continue to provide bilateral assistance for such efforts, will partner with the American Bar Association to offer additional support, and looks forward to working with South Africa during its chairmanship of OGP to promote open government across the continent.
• Through the Security Governance Initiative, announced last year at the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, the United States is working with six African countries to strengthen accountable and effective security and justice sector management.
• Through Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) compacts we have made control of corruption a benchmark for passing the MCC scorecard and a key criteria for partner eligibility. In Africa, MCC has approved compacts totaling nearly $6.8 billion over the past 10 years.
• We will continue to support the Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative and the Global Asset Recovery Focal Point Initiative, and to work with our partners on recovering assets stolen by corrupt actors. The United States has worked directly with a number of African countries, including Nigeria, to provide on-the-ground assistance from U.S. investigators and prosecutors to trace the proceeds of corruption and to build cases to recover stolen public revenue.
Supporting Free and Fair Elections and Political Processes: Competitive elections are essential to providing citizens the opportunity to choose their leadership and chart the future for their countries. U.S. support for elections and political transitions promotes voter registration and civic and voter education, capacity building for election commissions, support for political parties, training for election observers, and programs designed to foster transparency, reconciliation and peace.
• The United States will provide $21 million in new assistance to support the conduct of elections and political processes in 2015, 2016 and 2017 in Africa. In Kenya, our support will encourage participation in the electoral process with an emphasis on women, youth and disabled individuals. In Somalia, these resources will help Somalia’s parliament develop electoral legal frameworks, improve civic engagement, provide technical assistance to election management bodies, and support the development of inclusive political parties. In Uganda, U.S. resources aim to strengthen political parties and civic engagement in political processes. This support will also extend the regional elections training program in Southern Africa to improve the capacity of election administration officials across the region.
• The United States will continue to stand up for the fundamental importance of respecting constitutionally-mandated term limits in Africa, as we do around the world.
Promoting Wildlife Conservation: With Africa’s rich wildlife resources under increasing threat from poaching, in 2014 President Obama launched the National Strategy for Combating Wildlife Trafficking. In 2015, the United States unveiled its Implementation Plan to direct the efforts of the U.S. government in executing the Strategy, resulting in a number of initiatives that will build African governments’ capacity to protect wildlife. In addition, the United States will:
• Provide $800,000 to protect wildlife in East Africa, including for a three-year wildlife poaching and trafficking assessment program in Kenya conducted in partnership with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and TRAFFIC.
• Provide $7,000,000 in annual assistance to the National Park Agency of Gabon as part of a five-year partnership to secure the largest remaining population of forest elephants in Africa and to institutionalize natural resource management capacity.
• Provide $300,000 to sponsor a study on illicit financial flows related to wildlife trafficking in Eastern and Southern Africa and provide training to fill gaps identified by the study.
• Assign international wildlife law enforcement attachĂ©s to key countries of Botswana and Tanzania.
• Continue to support the training of international conservation law enforcement officers at the International Law Enforcement Academy in Botswana.
• Implement a nearly complete ban on the export and domestic trade of African elephant ivory in the United States, which expands upon the existing U.S. ban on ivory imports.
• The formation of a new voluntary partnership between major companies and non-profit organizations to reduce U.S. demand for ivory, rhino horn and other illegal wildlife products.
Supporting Civil Society and Promoting Civic Engagement: An empowered civil society is essential to good governance and is the lifeblood of democracy. As we do around the world, the United States supports the continued development of a vibrant and diverse civil society in African countries so citizens can freely organize, advocate, and communicate with one another and their governments.
• In 2013, President Obama announced Stand With Civil Society in partnership with civil society organizations and other donors as a global call to action to support, defend, and sustain civil society. In 2014, President Obama announced the United States will launch regional Civil Society Innovation Hubs to facilitate civil society networking and partnerships, including two hubs in sub-Saharan Africa.
• To monitor the strength of the civil society sector, development, and democratic trends across the continent, we will expand our support for the Civil Society Organization Sustainability Index so it can cover six additional African countries for the 2015 reports.
• The United States recognizes the importance of providing opportunities for youth to strengthen civil society across Africa. Through the Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI), the United States provides innovative leadership training opportunities in both the United States and Africa for young Africans working in civic leadership, business and entrepreneurship, and public management.
• The U.S. Legal Enabling Environment Program is providing technical assistance to government and civil society in selected countries in Africa to limit the issuance of restrictive laws and to minimize the negative effects of such laws that are already in place.
• As reflected during the White House Summit on Countering Violent Extremism, the United States strongly believes a healthy civil society can act as a counterweight to violent extremist groups. We are developing innovative programs in partnership with civil society to bolster communities to resist and reduce the threat of radicalization, alienation and violence, including in Kenya where we are supporting civil society, promoting dispute resolution, and empowering youth with employment skills in communities that are at risk for radicalization.
Strengthening the Rule of Law, Advancing Gender Equality and Protecting Human Rights: Protecting the rights of all people and promoting the rule of law is critical to democratic governance and long-term political stability. The United States engages across the continent to expand access to justice, strengthen judicial institutions, empower women and girls and advance human rights, including through the following activities:
• Five African countries – Benin, Morocco, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Tunisia – are members of the United States-led Equal Futures Partnership, through which countries undertake domestic reforms to remove barriers to women’s economic and political empowerment. Tanzania has also expressed its intent to join the Partnership. The United States will work with the Equal Futures Partnership’s International Steering Committee to double membership in Africa by 2017.
• In support of the U.S. Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-Based Violence Globally, the United States has supported over 884,326 survivors of gender-based violence in Africa, since 2012, with medical, psychosocial, legal, and economic assistance. During that period the United States has also invested $108.6 million from 2012 to 2014 to prevent gender-based violence in 26 countries throughout sub-Saharan Africa.
• Consistent with the U.S. National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security, the United States will provide $1.4 million to help multiple countries in sub-Saharan Africa develop or implement national action plans for women, peace, and security. In Mali, for example, we will partner to strengthen the role of Malian women and youth in political and peace processes. Since 2012, the United States has supported the participation of over 34,000 women in peacebuilding and political transition processes in Africa since 2012. This includes assistance that helps build the capacity of individual women and women’s organizations in negotiation, mediation, leadership, advocacy, and coalition-building.
• To advance the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) persons and promote their inclusion in development programs, USAID’s Global Development Partnership and Human Rights Grant Program, and the Department of State’s Global Equality Fund, support national and regional efforts that amplify local voices, protect persons from violence, and document human rights violations based on the principle of equal protection for all.
• In the coming months, the United States will begin an effort to help rebuild key security and justice sector institutions in Mali, including the Ministry of Justice, the courts, the National Judicial Training Institute, and the Attorney General’s Office, to help ensure that citizens have information and access to formal and informal dispute resolution mechanisms.
• In March 2015 President and Mrs. Obama launched the Let Girls Learn initiative, which brings together the Department of State, USAID, PEPFAR, the Peace Corps, the MCC, and other agencies to address the range of challenges preventing adolescent girls from attending and completing school and from realizing their potential as adults. These activities include: the development of “Learning Centers,” in Northern Nigeria to help youth, especially adolescent girls, displaced by conflict continue their education; the Girls Empowerment Movement in Zimbabwe to establish clubs in schools and encourage girls to be educated, empowered decision-makers; and the Global Give Back Circle in Kenya to guide disadvantaged girls to complete their education from upper secondary to university, gain employability skills, and become agents of change.
• Through the efforts of the First Lady and working with the Peace Corps, Let Girls Learn also supports community-generated and community-led girls’ education and empowerment projects worldwide. The first 11 Peace Corps countries include six African countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Mozambique, Togo, and Uganda. In October 2015, Ethiopia will become a Peace Corps Let Girls Learn country.
• The United States response to global HIV/AIDS is saving lives and changing the very course of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. PEPFAR and private sector partners are investing $210 million in African countries through the Determined, Resilient, Empowered, AIDS-free, Mentored, and Safe (DREAMS) partnership, which will aim to reduce HIV infections in adolescent girls and young women in Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
• In Tanzania and Malawi, the United States will undertake a new multifaceted effort to empower adolescent girls. Both Malawi and Tanzania are DREAMS countries and will be designated as priority countries under the U.S. Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-Based Violence and Executive Order 13623. They will also be eligible for additional funding through a Challenge Fund to be created under the Let Girls Learn initiative, which will bring together education stakeholders from the private sector, academia and civil society to help design and implement innovative programs – in these countries and others – to ensure that girls are able to both remain in and succeed in school.
Office of the Press Secretary
July 26, 2015
FACT SHEET: Advancing Democracy, Human Rights, Gender Equality, Wildlife Conservation, and Governance in Africa
The United States is committed to supporting African countries’ efforts to strengthen democratic institutions, support civil society, advance gender equality, improve governance, and protect human rights. We view these efforts as priorities not just because they are vital by themselves, but also because good governance and human rights underpin sustainable economic growth and peaceful and just societies. The United States pursues these goals through our development assistance, high-level diplomatic engagement, partnership with like-minded stakeholders, and public diplomacy that engages directly with citizens across the continent. Several of President Obama’s signature initiatives directly promote and elevate inclusive, transparent, and democratic governance in Africa.
Our efforts include:
Promoting Inclusive, Transparent and Accountable Governance: The United States is committed to building more effective and legitimate state institutions and will continue to support African governments in promoting efficiency, accountability, transparency, and in combating corruption. Accountable and efficient institutions improve the delivery of public and social services and create an enabling environment for attracting investment.
• The Partnership on Illicit Finance, announced during the 2014 U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, brings African partners and the United States together to jointly address the generation and transfer of proceeds from corruption and other financial crimes. The United States and several African nations met in late June to discuss challenges in stemming corruption-related illicit finance in Africa, and several African countries – including Burkina Faso, Kenya, Mauritius, Liberia, Niger, and Senegal – recently announced their membership and a commitment to develop tailored national action plans by the end of the year.
• Since the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit in 2014, Cabo Verde has become the newest member of the Open Government Partnership (OGP), a global initiative launched by President Obama with seven other heads of state in 2011 to increase transparency, bolster citizen engagement, and harness new technologies to improve governance. Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Sierra Leone, Tanzania and South Africa are also OGP members, and continue to make good on their commitments to open government. Kenya is reinvigorating its process of consultations with civil society on OGP, Sierra Leone has launched an open data portal and established an Access to Information Commission, while in Sierra Leone five ministries have signed integrity pacts with their Anticorruption Commission to promote government transparency and accountability. Liberia has published and Malawi is close to releasing new national action plans. Mozambique and Niger recently became eligible to join OGP and Benin announced it will complete reforms to become OGP eligible by April 2016. The United States will continue to provide bilateral assistance for such efforts, will partner with the American Bar Association to offer additional support, and looks forward to working with South Africa during its chairmanship of OGP to promote open government across the continent.
• Through the Security Governance Initiative, announced last year at the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, the United States is working with six African countries to strengthen accountable and effective security and justice sector management.
• Through Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) compacts we have made control of corruption a benchmark for passing the MCC scorecard and a key criteria for partner eligibility. In Africa, MCC has approved compacts totaling nearly $6.8 billion over the past 10 years.
• We will continue to support the Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative and the Global Asset Recovery Focal Point Initiative, and to work with our partners on recovering assets stolen by corrupt actors. The United States has worked directly with a number of African countries, including Nigeria, to provide on-the-ground assistance from U.S. investigators and prosecutors to trace the proceeds of corruption and to build cases to recover stolen public revenue.
Supporting Free and Fair Elections and Political Processes: Competitive elections are essential to providing citizens the opportunity to choose their leadership and chart the future for their countries. U.S. support for elections and political transitions promotes voter registration and civic and voter education, capacity building for election commissions, support for political parties, training for election observers, and programs designed to foster transparency, reconciliation and peace.
• The United States will provide $21 million in new assistance to support the conduct of elections and political processes in 2015, 2016 and 2017 in Africa. In Kenya, our support will encourage participation in the electoral process with an emphasis on women, youth and disabled individuals. In Somalia, these resources will help Somalia’s parliament develop electoral legal frameworks, improve civic engagement, provide technical assistance to election management bodies, and support the development of inclusive political parties. In Uganda, U.S. resources aim to strengthen political parties and civic engagement in political processes. This support will also extend the regional elections training program in Southern Africa to improve the capacity of election administration officials across the region.
• The United States will continue to stand up for the fundamental importance of respecting constitutionally-mandated term limits in Africa, as we do around the world.
Promoting Wildlife Conservation: With Africa’s rich wildlife resources under increasing threat from poaching, in 2014 President Obama launched the National Strategy for Combating Wildlife Trafficking. In 2015, the United States unveiled its Implementation Plan to direct the efforts of the U.S. government in executing the Strategy, resulting in a number of initiatives that will build African governments’ capacity to protect wildlife. In addition, the United States will:
• Provide $800,000 to protect wildlife in East Africa, including for a three-year wildlife poaching and trafficking assessment program in Kenya conducted in partnership with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and TRAFFIC.
• Provide $7,000,000 in annual assistance to the National Park Agency of Gabon as part of a five-year partnership to secure the largest remaining population of forest elephants in Africa and to institutionalize natural resource management capacity.
• Provide $300,000 to sponsor a study on illicit financial flows related to wildlife trafficking in Eastern and Southern Africa and provide training to fill gaps identified by the study.
• Assign international wildlife law enforcement attachĂ©s to key countries of Botswana and Tanzania.
• Continue to support the training of international conservation law enforcement officers at the International Law Enforcement Academy in Botswana.
• Implement a nearly complete ban on the export and domestic trade of African elephant ivory in the United States, which expands upon the existing U.S. ban on ivory imports.
• The formation of a new voluntary partnership between major companies and non-profit organizations to reduce U.S. demand for ivory, rhino horn and other illegal wildlife products.
Supporting Civil Society and Promoting Civic Engagement: An empowered civil society is essential to good governance and is the lifeblood of democracy. As we do around the world, the United States supports the continued development of a vibrant and diverse civil society in African countries so citizens can freely organize, advocate, and communicate with one another and their governments.
• In 2013, President Obama announced Stand With Civil Society in partnership with civil society organizations and other donors as a global call to action to support, defend, and sustain civil society. In 2014, President Obama announced the United States will launch regional Civil Society Innovation Hubs to facilitate civil society networking and partnerships, including two hubs in sub-Saharan Africa.
• To monitor the strength of the civil society sector, development, and democratic trends across the continent, we will expand our support for the Civil Society Organization Sustainability Index so it can cover six additional African countries for the 2015 reports.
• The United States recognizes the importance of providing opportunities for youth to strengthen civil society across Africa. Through the Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI), the United States provides innovative leadership training opportunities in both the United States and Africa for young Africans working in civic leadership, business and entrepreneurship, and public management.
• The U.S. Legal Enabling Environment Program is providing technical assistance to government and civil society in selected countries in Africa to limit the issuance of restrictive laws and to minimize the negative effects of such laws that are already in place.
• As reflected during the White House Summit on Countering Violent Extremism, the United States strongly believes a healthy civil society can act as a counterweight to violent extremist groups. We are developing innovative programs in partnership with civil society to bolster communities to resist and reduce the threat of radicalization, alienation and violence, including in Kenya where we are supporting civil society, promoting dispute resolution, and empowering youth with employment skills in communities that are at risk for radicalization.
Strengthening the Rule of Law, Advancing Gender Equality and Protecting Human Rights: Protecting the rights of all people and promoting the rule of law is critical to democratic governance and long-term political stability. The United States engages across the continent to expand access to justice, strengthen judicial institutions, empower women and girls and advance human rights, including through the following activities:
• Five African countries – Benin, Morocco, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Tunisia – are members of the United States-led Equal Futures Partnership, through which countries undertake domestic reforms to remove barriers to women’s economic and political empowerment. Tanzania has also expressed its intent to join the Partnership. The United States will work with the Equal Futures Partnership’s International Steering Committee to double membership in Africa by 2017.
• In support of the U.S. Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-Based Violence Globally, the United States has supported over 884,326 survivors of gender-based violence in Africa, since 2012, with medical, psychosocial, legal, and economic assistance. During that period the United States has also invested $108.6 million from 2012 to 2014 to prevent gender-based violence in 26 countries throughout sub-Saharan Africa.
• Consistent with the U.S. National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security, the United States will provide $1.4 million to help multiple countries in sub-Saharan Africa develop or implement national action plans for women, peace, and security. In Mali, for example, we will partner to strengthen the role of Malian women and youth in political and peace processes. Since 2012, the United States has supported the participation of over 34,000 women in peacebuilding and political transition processes in Africa since 2012. This includes assistance that helps build the capacity of individual women and women’s organizations in negotiation, mediation, leadership, advocacy, and coalition-building.
• To advance the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) persons and promote their inclusion in development programs, USAID’s Global Development Partnership and Human Rights Grant Program, and the Department of State’s Global Equality Fund, support national and regional efforts that amplify local voices, protect persons from violence, and document human rights violations based on the principle of equal protection for all.
• In the coming months, the United States will begin an effort to help rebuild key security and justice sector institutions in Mali, including the Ministry of Justice, the courts, the National Judicial Training Institute, and the Attorney General’s Office, to help ensure that citizens have information and access to formal and informal dispute resolution mechanisms.
• In March 2015 President and Mrs. Obama launched the Let Girls Learn initiative, which brings together the Department of State, USAID, PEPFAR, the Peace Corps, the MCC, and other agencies to address the range of challenges preventing adolescent girls from attending and completing school and from realizing their potential as adults. These activities include: the development of “Learning Centers,” in Northern Nigeria to help youth, especially adolescent girls, displaced by conflict continue their education; the Girls Empowerment Movement in Zimbabwe to establish clubs in schools and encourage girls to be educated, empowered decision-makers; and the Global Give Back Circle in Kenya to guide disadvantaged girls to complete their education from upper secondary to university, gain employability skills, and become agents of change.
• Through the efforts of the First Lady and working with the Peace Corps, Let Girls Learn also supports community-generated and community-led girls’ education and empowerment projects worldwide. The first 11 Peace Corps countries include six African countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Mozambique, Togo, and Uganda. In October 2015, Ethiopia will become a Peace Corps Let Girls Learn country.
• The United States response to global HIV/AIDS is saving lives and changing the very course of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. PEPFAR and private sector partners are investing $210 million in African countries through the Determined, Resilient, Empowered, AIDS-free, Mentored, and Safe (DREAMS) partnership, which will aim to reduce HIV infections in adolescent girls and young women in Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
• In Tanzania and Malawi, the United States will undertake a new multifaceted effort to empower adolescent girls. Both Malawi and Tanzania are DREAMS countries and will be designated as priority countries under the U.S. Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-Based Violence and Executive Order 13623. They will also be eligible for additional funding through a Challenge Fund to be created under the Let Girls Learn initiative, which will bring together education stakeholders from the private sector, academia and civil society to help design and implement innovative programs – in these countries and others – to ensure that girls are able to both remain in and succeed in school.
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