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| Changing times: Obama warned of the "politics of fear and resentment" in the annual Nelson Mandela lecture in Johannesburg (AFP Photo/GIANLUIGI GUERCIA) |
Johannesburg
(AFP) - Former US president Barack Obama on Tuesday used a tribute to Nelson
Mandela to warn that the world had plunged into "strange and uncertain
times", in what is likely to be seen as a veiled attack on Donald Trump.
Obama made
no direct reference to his successor but warned that "politics of fear and
resentment" were spreading, driven by leaders who scorned facts and told
lies with an "utter loss of shame."
He also
blasted climate-change denial, race-based migration policies, unbridled
capitalism and "strongman politics" -- stances often cited as the
hallmarks of Trump's controversial presidency.
"Given
the strange and uncertain times we are in, each day's news cycles brings more
head-spinning and disturbing headlines, I thought maybe it would be useful to
step back for a moment and get some perspective," Obama said at the start
of his speech.
Obama spoke
to a crowd of more than 10,000 people at a cricket stadium in Johannesburg in
the centrepiece event of celebrations 100 years since Nelson Mandela's birth.
"It is
in part because of the failures of governments and powerful elites… that we now
see much of the world threatening to return to an older, more dangerous, more
brutal way of doing business," Obama said.
On migration,
he appeared to take a sharp jab at Trump saying "it is not wrong to insist
that national borders matter... but that can't be an excuse for immigration
policies based on race or ethnicity or religion."
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Banners
depicting former US president Barack Obama, right, and other speakers
who have
given the Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture (AFP Photo/MARCO LONGARI)
|
On climate
change, he attacked the entrenched scepticism shown by Trump and others
American conservatives in the face of scientific evidence.
"You
have to believe in facts, without facts there is no basis for
cooperation," he said.
"I
can't find common ground if someone says climate change is just not happening
when almost all the world's scientists tell us it is.
"If
you start (by) saying it is an elaborate hoax... where do we start?
And he drew
laughter from the crowd with the line: "Politics today seems to reject the
very concept of objective truth -- people just make stuff up.
"We
see the utter loss of shame among political leaders who are caught in a lie and
they just double down and lie some more," he added.
Mandela's
birthday
Tuesday's
speech came on the eve of "Mandela Day" -- his birthday, which is
marked around the world every year on July 18.
Obama has
made relatively few public appearances since leaving the White House in 2017,
but he has often credited Mandela for being one of the great inspirations in
his life.
Mandela,
who died in 2013, remains a global icon for his long struggle against
white-minority apartheid rule and for his message of peace and reconciliation
after being freed following 27 years in prison.
Obama met
Mandela only briefly in 2005 but gave a eulogy at his funeral saying Mandela
"makes me want to be a better man" and hailing him as "the last
great liberator of the 20th century".
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Key dates
in the life of Nelson Mandela (AFP Photo/Gal ROMA)
|
Both men
were the first black presidents of their countries.
African President
Cyril Ramaphosa and Mandela's widow Graca Machel were among the guests from
Obama's speech -- his highest-profile address since leaving office.
"We
need more hope because we are living in difficult times," Nomsa Nkosi, 45,
a blind woman in the audience, told AFP.
"Mandela
was one of a kind and we need the youngsters to come and see what is meant by
motivation."
Before
arriving in South Africa, Obama paid a brief visit to Kenya, his father's home
country.
Obama will
also host a town hall event in Johannesburg on Wednesday for 200 young leaders
selected from across Africa to attend a five-day training programme.
Mandela was
imprisoned under apartheid rule in 1962 and only freed in 1990, when he went on
to lead the African National Congress party to victory in the first multi-race
elections in 1994.



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