June 27, 2003 - Baltimore Sun: Bush wants new regimes in Africa

Peace Corps Online: Peace Corps News: Headlines: Peace Corps Headlines - 2003: June 2003 Peace Corps Headlines: June 27, 2003 - Baltimore Sun: Bush wants new regimes in Africa

By Admin1 (admin) on Wednesday, July 02, 2003 - 10:11 am: Edit Post

Bush wants new regimes in Africa





Read and comment on this story from the Baltimore Sun on President Bush's call for for Liberian President Charles Taylor to give up power, for an interim government to be installed in Congo by next week and for democracy to be established in Zimbabwe. These are all three countries the Peace Corps has left because of concerns about the safety and security of volunteers. Bush chose to speak out on some of the bloodiest, longest conflicts in Africa in advance of his five-day trip there starting July 7. Bush's trip to Africa includes stops in Senegal, South Africa, Botswana, Uganda and Nigeria. Read the story at:

Bush wants new regimes in Africa*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



Bush wants new regimes in Africa

President demands end to governments in Congo, Liberia and Zimbabwe Associated Press
Originally published June 27, 2003

WASHINGTON - President Bush stepped deeper into Africa's political and military strife yesterday, calling for Liberian President Charles Taylor to give up power, for an interim government to be installed in Congo by next week and for democracy to be established in Zimbabwe.

"The cycle of attacks and escalation is reckless, it is destructive and it must be ended," Bush said ahead of his Africa trip next month. "To encourage progress across all of Africa, we must build peace at the heart of Africa."

Bush said the "freedom and dignity of a nation is under assault" in Zimbabwe, which faces its worst economic and political crisis since independence in 1980. President Robert G. Mugabe won last year's elections. Independent observers and the Bush administration say those elections were marred by state-orchestrated political violence, intimidation and vote rigging.

"I urge all nations, including the nations of Africa, to encourage a return to democracy in Zimbabwe," Bush said.

In an impassioned speech to a group representing American investors in Africa, Bush urged leaders of neighboring governments to actively back the establishment of a transitional government in Congo by Monday. Bush's deadline seemed ambitious: Talks are under way on forming an interim government, but there is no sign of an imminent breakthrough.

Bush also appealed to Congo's neighbors to back the creation of an integrated national army. Congo's nearly 5-year-old war has killed 3.3 million people, most through famine and disease, according to aid groups.

Bush also emphasized the importance of achieving a peace agreement in Sudan, where civil war broke out 20 years ago and has claimed more than 2 million lives. "The north and south must finalize a just and comprehensive peace agreement," Bush said.

He said he would return his special envoy, former Sen. John C. Danforth, to Sudan in two weeks. "He will make clear the only option on the table is peace," Bush said. "Both sides must now make their final commitment to peace and human rights and end the suffering in Sudan."

Bush chose to speak out on some of the bloodiest, longest conflicts in Africa in advance of his five-day trip there starting July 7.

In the hours before his address, angry crowds laid out the broken corpses of shelling victims at the gates of the U.S. Embassy in Monrovia, Liberia, accusing U.S. Marines and the government of failing to protect trapped people from fighting that has overrun the city.

Last Friday, Taylor renounced his pledge to cede power under a new peace accord, a move that sparked new violence in Liberia's three-year civil war.


"President Taylor needs to step down," Bush said to applause from the crowd, "so that his country can be spared further bloodshed." It was an extraordinary demand by the American government for a democratically elected leader of another country to step down. Taylor was elected in 1996 in a free and open presidential election.

"President Taylor needs to step down," Bush said to applause from the crowd, "so that his country can be spared further bloodshed."

It was an extraordinary demand by the American government for a democratically elected leader of another country to step down. Taylor was elected in 1996 in a free and open presidential election.

The call for Taylor's resignation was also remarkable because Bush spent part of his speech expressing his hope that democracy would take root in Africa. "Introducing democracy is hard in any society," he said.

Bush gave no hint he intended to offer U.S. military assistance in any of the countries he mentioned yesterday, as some outsiders have pleaded for. Rep. Jack Reed, a Rhode Island Democrat, wrote Bush a letter yesterday urging him to "organize a robust multinational force" to support a cease-fire and restore order in Liberia.

Bush announced a $100 million, 15-month initiative to bolster anti-terror efforts in Kenya, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Uganda and Tanzania. It will aim to step up patrols at airports and seaports, increase intelligence-sharing and improve computer databases to track terrorists.

"Many African governments have the will to fight the war on terror, and we are thankful for that. We will give them the tools and resources to win the war on terror," he said.

Bush's trip to Africa includes stops in Senegal, South Africa, Botswana, Uganda and Nigeria. It is a less ambitious trip than he had planned for January, before postponing it because of the looming Iraq war. The trip Bush plans for next month also brings him to far fewer stops than the one some aides at the National Security Council were urging him to make this time.

Copyright © 2003, The Baltimore Sun | Get home delivery

Click on a link below for more stories on PCOL

6/30/03
Main Sections
PCOL Magazine
Breaking News
One World
Peace Corps Library


What's New?

Directory Sign Up

RPCV Directory
RPCVs by COS
RPCVs by State
RPCVs by Interest
Top Stories
The Shrivers: A Special Legacy 30 June
Malian President Touré Speaks at PC HQ 26 June
NGOs feel the squeeze from USAID 25 June
German Peace Corps celebrates 40 years 24 June
Americorps' Failure: Lessons for Peace Corps 23 June
NPCA to announce President in July 19 June
Significant Issues with Peace Corps Bill 18 June
A PCV reports on Mauritania coup attempt 15 June
Peace Corps Bill passes House Committee 12 June
Bridgeland on "Volunteers for Prosperity" 9 June
PC announces Franklin H. Williams Awards 4 June
Peace Corps welcomed back to Botswana 2 June
RPCVs fight deportation of former Somali ally 28 May
Thomas Tighe honored at Hobart and Smith 27 May
Portland RPCV builds Multi-cultural Art Center 26 May
Special Sections
Advocacy
Bulletin Board
Cartoons
Congress
Directors
Headlines
History
Humor
Laws
Local RPCV Groups
Lost RPCVs
Master Index
NPCA
Obituaries
PCVs
Photography
RPCVs
Recruitment
Return to COS
Safety of PCVs
Service
Speaking Out
States
Stories
The Third Goal
Training
US Peace Corps
USA Freedom Corps
Writing
PCOL Magazine - June 2003 Issue
Protest at the Peace Corps
Returned Volunteers honor Jack Vaughn
Alcohol Abuse a big issue for PCVs in Central Asia
Peace Corps to add 1,000 AIDS/HIV volunteers
Op-ed: The Future of the Peace Corps
Marine Sergeant says PC is "truly hardcore"

Recent Feature Stories
Bill Moyers talks about America’s Future
RPCV is wheelchair basketball champion
Watch Director Vasquez on web tv
Presidential Candidate calls for 25,000 Volunteers
Shays says aid organizations curtailed in Iraq
Op-ed: US has obligations in Iraq says RPCV

Special Reports
Exclusive: How RPCVs organized anti-war Ad
Improvements needed in Volunteer Support
From Russia with Love
Health Concerns: The Controversy over Lariam
GAO Reports on PCV Safety and Security
The Digital Freedom Initiative
PC/Washington: Senior Staff Appointments at PC HQ
PC Expansion: The Numbers Game?
Op-ed: Why Peace Corps needs Shriver's 4th Goal
When should PC return to Afghanistan?
RPCV Spy dies in Moscow
Op-ed: The Case for Peace Corps Independence
Preservation of an Independent Peace Corps



Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Liberia; COS - Zimbabwe; COS - Congo Kinsasha; Safety and Security of Volunteers

PCOL6508
00

.


Add a Message


This is a public posting area. Enter your username and password if you have an account. Otherwise, enter your full name as your username and leave the password blank. Your e-mail address is optional.
Username:  
Password:
E-mail: