Hillary is doing a seven-nation African tour and the topic of corruption keeps coming up in news reports about her visits. Here is one example where she talks strongly about corruption in Nigeria. The problem is she doesn't finish the sentence by using conditionality and saying US foreign aid will be reduced 20% per year until corruption is halted in Nigeria:
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Note: I have also included an article about an article where Hillary urges Angola to fight corruption, AND a blog article citing several quotes from Hillary about corruption during her Africa tour.
From NPR.org
Clinton, In Nigeria, Talks Tough On Corruption
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton offered up a blunt assessment of
problems in Africa's most populous nation Wednesday, accusing the
government of Nigeria of enabling a culture of corruption.
On the
fifth stop of a seven-nation African tour, Clinton met with Nigerian
officials and gave a speech in which she urged the country to fight
corruption and pursue democratic reforms.
Her message resonated
strongly with the former head of Nigeria's Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission, Nuhu Ribadu, who now lives in what he describes as
"self-exile" in the United States.
"The U.S. government must be
honest, not diplomatic," says Ribadu, who is now a visiting fellow at
the Center for Global Development, a Washington, D.C. think tank. "The
U.S. must be on the side of the Nigerian people, not on the side of the
leaders."
Clinton spoke out on Nigeria's corruption problems
after a meeting with Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua, whose election
in 2007 was widely denounced as fraudulent by international observers.
Clinton
said the country's "lack of transparency and accountability has eroded
the legitimacy of the government and contributed to the rise of groups
that embrace violence." She pressed for electoral reforms in time for
elections in 2011.
Nigeria's foreign minister told reporters
after the meeting that Yar'Adua had acknowledged that "we have some
serious challenges there."
Ribadu says corruption is more than a
challenge. "It's the biggest problem confronting us," he says. Ribadu
points out that Nigeria is the world's sixth largest exporter of oil,
but "we've not been able to use the resources that we have, because it
goes into private pockets."
He says that Nigeria's main security
problems, a long-running insurgency in the oil-rich Niger Delta and a
sectarian conflict in the north of the country, can be traced to
disaffection among those who feel that they have been prevented from
sharing in Nigeria's wealth.
More than 700 people were killed
last month in clashes between police and a radical Islamic sect in the
northern city of Maiduguri. The sect recruited mainly jobless young men
"reacting to corruption that is at the heart of the problem," Ribadu
says.
Clinton did not comment directly on the crackdown against
the Boko Haram — the name means "Western education is prohibited" — but
said that the U.S. has "no doubt that al-Qaida has a presence in North
Africa" and that extremists would "seek a foothold wherever they can."
=======================================
Clinton Asks Angola to Fight Corruption, Hold Presidential Vote
By Janine Zacharia and Candido Mendes - dated August 9, 2009
from Bloomberg news service
Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton pressed Angola to investigate human rights abuses, fight
corruption and hold free, fair and “timely” presidential
elections.
Angola’s prosperity depends on “good governance and strong
democratic institutions,” Clinton said after meeting with
Angolan Foreign Minister Assuncao Afonso dos Anjos in Luanda,
Angola’s capital.
The foreign minister asked for more time for the
presidential election, the country’s first since 1992. Angola,
which gained independence from Portugal in 1975, held a
parliamentary election last year.
The presidential vote, due this year, may be delayed until
2010 as the country works on a new constitution, Agence France-
Presse reported July 15.
Clinton said the U.S. plans to expand trade and investment
with Angola and is looking at ways to cooperate more closely
with the Chinese on economic development in Africa.
China has extended more than $5 billion in credit to
Angola, by the State Department’s calculation. In 2008, the U.S.
Agency for International Development gave Angola $40 million in
assistance.
“I’m not looking at what anyone else can do, I’m looking
at what the United States can do,” she said.
Clinton is the first U.S. secretary of state to visit
Angola since Colin Powell tried to solicit support for the Iraq
war in 2002, when Angola held a seat on the United Nations
Security Council. No secretary of state has ever spent the night
here as Clinton will and no U.S. president has visited Angola
since it became independent in 1975.
Clinton came to Angola, which surpassed Nigeria as the
largest African producer of crude oil in July, in a nod to the
country’s growing prominence in the hydrocarbon sector. Even
with its enormous resources, the country of 17 million needs
investment in infrastructure, coaxing on transparency and an
alternative to Chinese investment, U.S. officials and analysts
say.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Janine Zacharia in Luanda, Angola at
jzacharia@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: August 9, 2009 10:57 EDT
===============================================================
Hillary Clinton Echoes President Obama, Addresses Corruption in Sub-Saharan Africa
August 6, 2009
Author: Rachel Brown
Rachel
Brown is a communications intern at the Task Force on Financial
Integrity and Economic Development. She is an International Relations
major at Tufts University.
Kicking
off her visit to sub-Saharan Africa in Kenya, Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton used her time there to speak pointedly about
corruption, the same issue highlighted by President Obama in his trip
to Accra earlier this summer. U.S. news coverage emphasized this
feature of her visit, with a CNN article, Clinton in Kenya urges a cleanup of corruption,
stating: “Secretary of State Hillary Clinton delivered a ‘tough but
lovingly presented’ message to Kenya on Thursday: shun corruption and
reform government.”
Clinton drove home the economic consequences of corruption, arguing that: “This is not just about good governance — it’s also about good business.”
An Associated Press article opens with the lines:
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
criticized Kenya on Wednesday for rampant graft and corruption as she
made the case that business and trade across Africa cannot grow without
good governance and solid democracy…Clinton said, “True economic
progress in Africa will depend on responsible governments that reject
corruption, enforce the rule of law and deliver results for their
people.”
Clinton also focused on the heavily contested debate over where
suspected perpetrators of the violence following the December 2007
elections should be tried and on the government’s failure to implement
the reforms agreed upon during the formation of the current coalition
government. Commenting on the post-election violence, the role of the
U.S. in resolving the dispute, and the current state of justice, she stated:
“…the absence of strong and effective democratic
institutions has permitted ongoing corruption, impunity, politically
motivated violence and a lack of respect for a rule of law,” Clinton
said. “These conditions helped fuel the postelection violence and they
are continuing to hold Kenya back.”
Clinton also took note
of rampant corruption within Kenya’s judiciary system, her visit coming
on the heels of a decision to try suspected perpetrators of violence
within the court system instead of a special tribunal. She even used a
phrase commonly uttered in Kenya, “why hire a lawyer when you can buy a
judge,” in reference to judicial corruption.
Kenyan newspapers covered these issues, with an additional focus on
Clinton’s message that Kenyans must be responsible for reducing
corruption and on the fact that the U.S. would not pose sanctions on
Kenya (coverage leading up to Clinton’s visit speculated potential
sanctions from the U.S.) An article in one of Kenya’s major newspapers
even opened with the line:
“Hillary Clinton’s top assistant on Africa has made
clear why the United States is unlikely to take punitive action aimed
at forcing reforms in Kenya.”
CNN also noted this point,
quoting Clinton saying that: “We will consider consequences aimed at
individuals, not aimed at the people of Kenya.” The emphasis Clinton
placed on the role of Kenyans to solve corruption ranged from the
statements that: “The US cannot solve Kenya’s problems… we cannot
dictate to you how to run this government; it is not up to us…The
answers to Kenya’s challenges lie with Kenyans,” to concrete steps
Kenyans could take to act. Quoting The Daily Nation, a major Kenyan newspaper:
Terming Kenya as a “very political country” where
“everybody has a political opinion”, Mrs Clinton asked those in the
civil society to join politics and try to change the system from
within…The pledge to support Kenya’s relatively vibrant civil society
led to a call to all Kenyans to submit their ideas to a special portal
on the website of the US Embassy in Nairobi…“Use the website to tell us
what you think we can do to help you make your country better,” she
said.
Clinton has driven home the message that taking measures against
corruption is necessary not only to attract investment, but also to end
impunity and other social ills underlying the violence that ensued
after the 2007 elections. She has placed the burden of doing so on
Kenyans, but has nonetheless firmly stated the U.S. position and a
willingness to assist Kenyans in the fight against corruption. In doing
so, she has echoed the message that President Obama set forth in Accra,
that while Africa faces a history wrought with challenges that plague
the continent today, it is up to Africans to take responsibility for
Africa. To conclude in the same vein, Obama delivered a video message
after Clinton’s speech, in which he proclaimed that: “Only Africans can unlock Africa’s potential.”
Tags: Africa, Clinton, corruption, Governance, Hillary Clinton, Kenya, State Department, US
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on Thursday, August 6th, 2009 at 3:40 pm
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