Can African Heads of State Speak?

thatrapsfan

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These days, well-behaved African heads of state are rewarded by Barack Obama with the chance to meet with him in groups of four and have their picture taken with him. It’s like meeting Beyonce, but you get to call it a state visit. That’s what happened on Friday when Malawi’s Joyce Banda, Senegal’s Macky Sall, Cape Verde’s José Maria Neves and Sierra Leone’s Ernest Bai Koroma were paraded before the White House press corps, sitting in star-struck silence as Barack reeled off a kind of wikipedia-level roll-call of their accomplishments. They beamed like competition winners. It was all very feudal.

President Obama Welcomes African Leaders - YouTube

You get the sense that they were given a nice White House tote bag, perhaps a signed copy of Dreams from my Father, and were then patted on the head and sent off to inconsequential NGO-led roundtables. Presumably the thinking is that being thus sprinkled with all-American stardust plays well back home. (Joyce Banda has already boasted of being the first Malawian president invited to the White House, perhaps forgetting that Kamuzu was a master of political theater and would never have allowed himself to be wheeled out as somebody else’s prop.)
The wider symbolism is unmistakeable: These guys, Obama is saying, work for me. African visitors (unlike all other heads of state) can be received in groups, and, as they’re all Africans, don’t need to be spoken to individually. Politics? Negotiations? They’re just happy to be here.
The East African called it as they saw it: “The meeting was to reward them for their support for US interests in Africa.” Though some others wanted to be there. In Uganda, some sites were wringing their hands over why Museveni hadn’t been invited.

Of course, in the past, Barack and Michelle have been happy to be snapped with any old African leader, so it seems the realization that these photocalls can themselves be a kind of diplomatic prize has been relatively recent. Here are some of our favorite meet-the-president moments. We don’t need to remind some of you, but the first three were from Obama’s first term when he went to address the United Nations (they are: Paul and Chantal Biya; Joyce Banda’s predecessor Bingu wa Mutharika; the Musevenis and, finally, King Mswati III) while the final one was his meeting with Hosni Mubarak, before that Life President was dispatched by his people.


obamabiya.jpeg



bingu_wa_mutharika_with_obamas.jpeg


barack-michelle-obama-met-new-york-yoweri-kaguta-museveni-uganda.jpeg



king_mswati_iii_with_obamas.jpeg


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Can African Heads of State Speak?
 

theworldismine13

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These "africanists" for lack of a batter term are corny, they cant even give props when props are deserved, Obama has done a good job promoting democracy and they are babbling about pics in the un and Mubarak????
 

2Quik4UHoes

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lmfao, I was :dead: off "It was all very feudal." Made em sound like some swagless vassals.

Eh, what was the writer expecting exactly? Is he being honest with himself about politics in Africa and nikkaz that play in it.
 

thatrapsfan

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Why is he receiving them as a group? This is quite the random photo-op. I'd imagine the equivalent would be receiving the presidents of Jordan, Tajikistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh under the banner of Asian leaders.
 

theworldismine13

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Why is he receiving them as a group? This is quite the random photo-op. I'd imagine the equivalent would be receiving the presidents of Jordan, Tajikistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh under the banner of Asian leaders.

its not really a random photo op with african leaders, its just a photo op with world leaders and they picked out the ones with africans, there is no significance to those photos, its just a shake and grin at the UN

the video in the white house is significant but thats actually a good thing that obama is doing, since he is picking out democratic leaders
 

the mechanic

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its not really a random photo op with african leaders, its just a photo op with world leaders and they picked out the ones with africans, there is no significance to those photos, its just a shake and grin at the UN

the video in the white house is significant but thats actually a good thing that obama is doing, since he is picking out democratic leaders

:comeon: Even ignoring that Barry has spent more time fighting real democracy than Ronald reagan...you still have given Mubarak and king Mswati that Democratic label..even Museveni is a maybe cos he has been looking like he wont step down without shots being licked
 

theworldismine13

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:comeon: Even ignoring that Barry has spent more time fighting real democracy than Ronald reagan...you still have given Mubarak and king Mswati that Democratic label..even Museveni is a maybe cos he has been looking like he wont step down without shots being licked

i was taking about the video not the pictures, the presidents in the video were democratic, the other pictures are irrelevant
 
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