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Title: Clinton Tells Lawmakers World Needs Nigeria
to Succeed (President says Peace Corps returning to Nigeria)
(830)
Author: Charles W.
Corey
Date: 20000827
Text:
Washington File Correspondent
Abuja, Nigeria -- "The world needs Nigeria to succeed" in its
democratic transition and economic transformation, President Bill
Clinton told a joint session of Nigeria's National Assembly April 26 as
he announced a new series of U.S. initiatives to help it along.
"Every great nation must become more than the sum of its parts,"
Clinton told Nigerian lawmakers who welcomed him to their legislative
chambers with a standing ovation.
Nigeria, he said, has "within it the seeds of every great development
going on in the world today and it has a future worth fighting for."
One part of that future, he said, can be seen in the person of a
Nigerian-American Philip Emeagwali,
a budding computer genius who lived in a refugee camp during Nigeria's
civil war. Clinton said Emeagwali had to leave school at one
point because his parents could not afford the cost. But he won a
scholarship and subsequently invented a formula that lets computers make
more than 3,000 million calculations per second.
What is so exciting about Emeagwali's case, Clinton said, is
that "there is another Philip Emeagwali -- or hundreds of them -- or
thousands of them -- growing up in Nigeria today."
Clinton pointed to the importance of interdependence and the
"experience of diversity" and the "common faith in freedom" that both
Nigeria and the United States share.
"Today, America has people from over 200 racial, ethnic and religious
groups," he said, adding that the most important thing we have is our
"common humanity."
Two broad challenges face both countries, he said. The first is to
work together to help Nigeria prepare its economy for the 21st century
-- to make it the "engine of economic growth and renewal across the
continent." The second is to "work together to help build the peace that
Nigeria and all of Africa so desperately needs."
To build stronger economies, he said, the world must confront killer
diseases that are "draining the life out of Africa's cities and
villages," such as HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.
Clinton saluted President Olusegun Obasanjo "for his leadership" on
the HIV/AIDS front, and in "recognizing that we can't beat AIDS by
denying it; we cant beat AIDS by stigmatizing it. Right now, we can only
beat AIDS by preventing it, by changing behavior and changing attitudes
and breaking the silence about how the disease is transmitted and how it
can be stopped."
Building a stronger economy also means helping all children learn, he
said. "In the old economy, a country's economic prospects were limited
by its place on the map and its natural resources. Location was
everything. In the new economy, information, education and motivation is
everything."
Clinton announced that the United States will work with a variety of
Nigerian non-governmental organizations (NGO's) and universities to set
up community resource centers to provide Internet training and support
in all regions of Nigeria.
He also said that he has asked the Peace Corps to "reestablish its
partnership with Nigeria as soon as possible to help with education,
health and information technology."
Clinton said he and Obasanjo earlier discussed an international
initiative to feed schoolchildren worldwide. "We know that if we could
guarantee every child in every developing nation one nutritious meal a
day, we could dramatically increase school enrollment," he said. "I hope
we can do this in Nigeria."
Clinton said as more and more democratic and economic reforms take
place everyone will be able eventually to say "Come to Nigeria. This is
a place of untapped opportunity because it is a place of unlimited
potential."
Regarding trade matters, Clinton recalled the recently passed U.S.
African Growth and Opportunity Act. "The challenge is to make sure that
any foreign involvement promotes equitable development - lifting people
in communities that have given much for Nigeria's economic progress, but
so far have gained too little from it," he said.
On debt relief, Clinton said "We are prepared to support a
substantial reduction of Nigeria's debts on a multilateral basis as long
as your economic and financial reforms continue to make progress and you
ensure that the benefits of debt reduction go to the people," like those
living in the Niger Delta.
On democracy, Clinton counseled "patience and perseverance. It
demands openness to honorable compromise and cooperation. It demands
support on a constant basis from the people of Nigeria and from your
friends abroad." What is not required, he said, is "being patient" with
corruption or injustice.
Democracy also depends upon a political culture that "welcomes
spirited debate without letting politics become a blood sport. It
depends on strong institutions, an independent judiciary, a military
under firm civilian control" and contributions from both men and women
alike."
Concluding, Clinton hailed Nigeria for the leading role it has played
in peacekeeping, pointing out that the West African nation has spent
thousands of millions on peacekeeping -- and sacrificed hundreds of its
soldiers lives in the search for peace in West Africa. Clinton said the
United States this week began training the first of five Nigerian
battalions for U.N. peacekeeping duties in Sierra Leone.
Clinton ended his first day in Nigeria attending a state dinner in
his honor hosted by President Obasanjo.
(The Washington File is a product of the Office of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov) NNNN
Product Name: WASHINGTON FILE
Document
Type: ARTICLE
Keywords: WHITE HOUSE
NIGERIA CLINTON ASSEMBLY 1E CC/RF
Thematic
Codes: 1E
Languages:
ENGLISH
Originating Team: 00082704.AAA