STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- South Sudan, the world's youngest country, is in conflict with Sudan
- Clinton's visit aims to encourage negotiations between the two sides
- She will also travel to Uganda, which is dealing with an Ebola virus outbreak
- While in Kenya, Clinton will meet the leader of Somalia's transitional government
Clinton sets
off Tuesday on the 11-day trip, which is intended to emphasize U.S.
efforts to strengthen democracy,
encourage economic growth and further peace
and security
in Africa, Victoria Nuland, a State Department spokeswoman, said in a
statement Monday.
The visit begins in
Senegal, a small country on Africa's west coast that has been an outpost
of democratic stability in a region with a history of
electoral chaos, civil wars and coups.
Despite outbreaks of
violence in
Senegal earlier this year surrounding
former President Abdoulaye Wade's decision to seek a controversial
third term
in office, power passed peacefully to the eventual victor in the
presidential election, Macky Sall.
South Sudan's
growing pains
Challenges on living in South
Sudan
The hunt for
Joseph Kony
Mia Farrow: Focus on Kony is
good
Clinton will
meet with Sall and "deliver a speech applauding the resilience of Senegal's
democratic
institutions and highlighting America's approach to
partnership," Nuland said.
The secretary of state will
then travel to one of the tensest areas of Africa: South Sudan, which has edged
close to full-scale war with Sudan, the nation from which it separated in July
2011 after decades of bloody conflict.
The two African
countries still disagree over the demarcation of the border between them and the
transportation and processing of oil from South Sudan, which
obtained around 70% of the
formerly united country's reserves when it became
independent.
The U.N. Security Council
is pressuring the countries to find a
peaceful resolution of the disputes. Border clashes have displaced at least
150,000 people and created a huge humanitarian crisis.
While in South
Sudan, Clinton will meet President Salva
Kiir in
order to "reaffirm U.S. support and to encourage progress in
negotiations with Sudan to reach agreement on issues related to security,
oil and citizenship," Nuland said.
Clinton's
next stop is Uganda, where the authorities are dealing with an
outbreak of the highly infectious Ebola virus that has
killed at least 14 people this month.
Uganda is "a key
U.S. partner
in promoting regional security,
particularly
in regard to Somalia and in regional efforts to
counter the Lord's Resistance Army," Nuland said.
A highly effective
celebrity-backed social media campaign earlier this year by the nonprofit
group
Invisible Children focused worldwide attention on the Lord's Resistance
Army and its leader, the fugitive warlord Joseph Kony.
The African Union has
stepped up efforts this year to capture
Kony, deploying 5,000 troops in March
after a resurgence in attacks by his
forces displaced thousands of people in Uganda, South Sudan, the
Democratic Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic, according to U.N.
estimates.
Kony is wanted by
the
International Criminal Court at the Hague for
war crimes and crimes against humanity, stemming in part
from allegations of his vicious tactics to conscript children as soldiers and
sex slaves
in his army.
President Barack
Obama ordered 100 troops to central Africa last year to help in the
hunt for Kony. The troops are
advising regional
forces.
After Uganda, Clinton will
visit Kenya, where she will meet local officials, as well as Sheikh Sharif
Ahmed, president of the transitional government of Somalia, which is trying to
emerge from years of civil war.
Security appears to be
improving in Somalia, long considered a
failed state, since African Union troops pushed
Al-Shabaab, an Islamic militant group affiliated with al Qaeda, out of central
Mogadishu last year after prolonged urban fighting.
Clinton will
then head south to Malawi where she will "discuss economic and political
governance," Nuland said.
Lastly, she will
visit South Africa to participate in a strategic dialogue between the
two countries and pay her respects to Nelson Mandela, the former
president.
The frail icon has
not appeared
in public for years, but he was celebrated
worldwide on his 94th birthday earlier this month for his role in
reconciling a country torn apart by
apartheid.
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