Deutsche Welle, 29 June 2013
US President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle have met with South African leader Jacob Zuma in Pretoria. The two leaders will hold talks set to focus on trade, boosting economic ties and regional security in Africa.
US President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle have met with South African leader Jacob Zuma in Pretoria. The two leaders will hold talks set to focus on trade, boosting economic ties and regional security in Africa.
Zuma
received Obama and his delegation at the Union Buildings, the country's seat of
government, on the first morning of his three-day visit to the country.
The US
president arrived late on Friday from Senegal, where he began his Africa tour.
He is accompanied by his wife, First Lady Michelle Obama, and their daughters,
Malia and Sasha.
The White
House confirmed that the Obamas would meet privately late Saturday with
relatives of former South African President Nelson Mandela. The statement added
that Barack Obama would not be meeting the critically ill anti-apartheid leader
in hospital.
"The
President and First Lady will meet privately with members of the Mandela family
to offer their thoughts and prayers at this difficult time," a US official
said.
"Out
of deference to Nelson Mandela's peace and comfort and the family's wishes,
they will not be visiting the hospital," the unnamed official told the
news agency AFP.
Mandela, a
Nobel Peace Prize winner, is critically ill with a recurrent lung disease
dating from his time in apartheid-era prisons, where he was incarcerated for
27-years for his struggle under white-minority rule.
Later on
Saturday, the US president is set to meet with young people in Soweto, the scene
of the 1976 student protests against the racist apartheid regime while Mandela
and fellow African National Congress leaders were incarcerated.
Obama's
three-country tour concludes next week in Tanzania.
jlw/mkg (AP, AFP, dpa)
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