Kerry to attend AU summit in Ethiopia
US Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday revealed he will attend an African Union summit in Ethiopia next month, and said Washington had be more engaged with Africa.
The May 19-27 summit in Addis
Ababa will mark the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Organization
of African Unity, the predecessor to the AU.
Kerry told US lawmakers he was
concerned by China's growing influence in Africa, and viewed a recent
tour of three African nations by Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as a
“negative development.”
“China is now out-investing the
United States significantly in Africa,” Kerry told his former colleagues
on the Senate foreign relations committee.
Although China was principally
focused on resources which did not pose direct competition to the United
States, Kerry said he was worried about possible negative
consequences.
“Between Iran, China, other
countries... they're having an impact on the business practices and on
the choices... some of the governments there are facing. And it's not
been a positive one in some regards.”
Without
naming names, the top US diplomat said some people were “engaged in bad
business practices, in bribery” which was impacting the stability of
some governments.
“So we're going to have to be more
engaged in Africa,” Kerry said, adding the State Department, along with
the White House, was “rushing” to fill vacant positions such as a
pointman for Sudan and a special envoy for the Democratic Republic of
Congo.
“Also I'm going to be at the 50th
anniversary in Ethiopia in May,” Kerry told senators, adding “there are
some other engagements that we're looking at with respect to sort of
trying to be front and present.”
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