Kenya: Trials would aid fight against corruption – Obama

The US president has urged Kenya to hold “visible” trials to tackle corruption, which he said could be the “biggest impediment” to further growth.

After talks in Nairobi, President Obama and Kenyan counterpart Uhuru Kenyatta said they were “united against terrorism” and efforts to deal with it.

But the two leaders differed sharply in their positions on gay rights.

While Mr Obama spoke strongly against discrimination, Mr Kenyatta said Kenya did not share the same values.

Earlier Mr Obama praised Africa’s economic and business potential in a speech.

“Africa is on the move… People are being lifted out of poverty, incomes are up (and) the middle class is growing,” he told a business summit.

BBC Africa Live: Obama in Kenya updates

He also visited a memorial for those killed in the 1998 US embassy bombing.

The trip, which began on Friday, is Mr Obama’s first visit as president to the country where his father was born.

‘Breaking the habit’

Barack Obama said he was encouraged by statements President Kenyatta had made about the need to root out corruption.

People were being “consistently sapped by corruption at a high level and at a low level, ” and there was a need for “visible prosecutions,” Mr Obama said, to show Kenyans that action was being taken.

“They don’t have to be a forensic accountant to know what is going on,”

Police officers and civil servants had to be paid properly to help curb corruption, but sometimes it just required “breaking the habit”.

US President Barack Obama lays a wreath at the Memorial Park in Nairobi

US President Barack Obama lays a wreath at the Memorial Park in Nairobi

President Obama sits alongside his step-grandmother, Mama Sarah (left) and half-sister Auma Obama. 24 July 2015

President Obama had dinner with his Kenyan relatives in Nairobi on Friday evening

Crowds wait for US president's motorcade to pass by in Nairobi (25/07/2015)

Crowds waited to catch a glimpse of the US president in Nairobi on Saturday

Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta and US President Barack Obama participate in a bilateral meeting at the State House in Nairobi 25/07/2015

The US and Kenyan leaders held talks on a range of issues in Nairobi on Saturday

President Obama had told the BBC he would deliver a blunt message on gay rights when he travelled to Africa – and defended his stand in response to a question at the joint news conference.

“If somebody is a law-abiding citizen, who is going about their business… and not harming anybody, the idea that they are going to be treated differently or abused because of who they love is wrong. Full stop,” he said.

But Uhuru Kenyatta said gay rights were not “foremost” in the minds of Kenyans.

There were “some things that we must admit we don’t share – our culture, our societies don’t accept,” he said.

“It’s very difficult for us to be able to impose on people that which they themselves do not accept.”

BBC

One comment


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  1. We all know obama is our brother but pls obama don’t bring tht stupid ideas of omosex in Africa

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