Theresa May to make first trip to sub-Saharan Africa by UK leader in five years

Msapere

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Theresa May will become the first British leader in five years to visit sub-Saharan Africa this week, making a three-day trip that includes meetings with the presidents of South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya.
The prime minister will bring a trade delegation with her on a chartered RAF Voyager in an attempt to boost Britain’s post-Brexit export prospects, although she comes at a time when the government has been accused of a paying insufficient attention to the region.
The last time a British prime minister visited sub-Saharan Africa was in December 2013 when David Cameron attended Nelson Mandela’s funeral. He had intended to return in the summer of 2016 in the final days of his premiership but the planned visit was abandoned when May took over as Conservative leader earlier than anticipated.
May has never visited sub-Saharan Africa. Her only previous trip to the continent was a visit to Tunisia in 2015 in the aftermath of the Sousse hotel terror attack.
Speaking ahead of her flight to South Africa on Monday evening, the prime minister said: “Africa stands right on the cusp of playing a transformative role in the global economy” and that “a more prosperous, growing and trading Africa is in all of our interests”.
She also signalled that the three-country tour represented an effort to showcase Britain’s standing in the world ahead of Brexit. “As we prepare to leave the European Union, now is the time for the UK to deepen and strengthen its global partnerships,” she said.

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Amongthe 29-strong trade delegation is a representative of the heavy equipment maker JCB, whose chair and owner Anthony Bamford is a major Conservative donor and long-term Brexit supporter.
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Others traveling with the prime minister includes David Schwimmer, the chief executive of the London Stock Exchange, and Bill Winters, the chief executive of the emerging markets bank Standard Chartered, who has complained about the inconvenience of Brexit and expressed the hope that it may be possible to “steer around” a hard Brexit.
May will arrive in Cape Town on Tuesday for a bilateral meeting with the South African president, Cyril Ramaphosa. Weather permitting, she will also visit Robben Island, where Mandela was incarcerated by the apartheid regime for 18 years.
May arrives at a time when Ramaphosa, who took over from Jacob Zuma in February, is desperate to secure further foreign investment after the controversy and corruption allegations that dominated his predecessor’s tenure.
He is also under pressure to undertake land reform in a country where white farmers still own the majority of the most productive estates, and he has agreed to press ahead with plans to change the constitution to permit land expropriation without compensation. Downing Street said ahead of May’s trip that it wanted to see a measured, rules-based approach to land reform.
The prime minister will then meet the Nigerian president, Muhammadu Buhari, in Abujabefore flying to Nairobi for a bilateral with his Kenyan counterpart, Uhuru Kenyatta. It will be the first visit to Kenya by a British prime minister for 30 years.
In both countries, May will discuss measures to discourage migration to Europe and improve security cooperation against Boko Haram in west Africa and al-Shabaab in Somalia. She will see British troops in Kenya who have been training soldiers in the region to deal with improvised explosives.
May will also be under pressure to raise gay rights in Nigeria and Kenya, countries where homosexuality is illegal. She said in April that she “deeply regrets” Britain’s colonial legacy of introducing anti-homosexual laws, although Kenyatta said gay rights were of “no importance” a few days later, while in Nigeria gay people have been driven deeper underground.
The prime minister will travel in a specially converted RAF Voyager, which is based on the Airbus A330. It was refitted at a cost of £10m to provide long-haul transport for ministers and the royal family, butcan also still be used for its original purpose of air-to-air refuelling.
Theresa May to make first trip to sub-Saharan Africa by UK leader in five years
 
Jamaa wenu hawezi ongea kizungu
ngoja uskie.... 'nyie ni vibaraka wa wazungu' mnapenda kulamba miguu ya wazungu etc etc ...

Anyway, if a country maintains positive relationships with other countries, then there is going to be cooperation and meetings between those nations... Kenya and the UK have for long been partners in a variety of aspects...Many of Kenya's tourists come from the country...Many Kenyans study or have studied in the UK (I am one of them)...Kenya and the Uk are partners in trade and security etc etc...
 
ngoja uskie.... 'nyie ni vibaraka wa wazungu' lamba miguu ya wazungu etc etc ...
Haha they want to eat their cake and have it. They say they hate white people and they helped African countries get their independence but at the same time they want to be loved and visited by the same white people. Confused fellas.
 
Haha they want to eat their cake and have it. They say they hate white people and they helped African countries get their independence but at the same time they want to be loved and visited by the same white people. Confused fellas.
hahaha I also don't get this...when africa cooperates with other countries, then that is a good thing as long as there are mutual benefits...
 
You might have studied in UK but not an accredited institution.

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Good to know you studied there. Right now i am studying in a lesser known E.U country. All the best.
 
Kajitoa EU sasa anatafuta wahanga consumers wa bidhaa zao,na sisi tu say no kama wao walivyosema no to the EU
 
Haha they want to eat their cake and have it. They say they hate white people and they helped African countries get their independence but at the same time they want to be loved and visited by the same white people. Confused fellas.
When you claim they, you mean all tanzanians, which is not true. Because a majority of us knows that they do not come for free but for their interest first. Do not generalize, she has every right not to visit Tz, we kicked them out, you welcomed them and gave them large chunks of land, we embraced swahili you embraced english, kenya was their main colony, we were just under their care after they defeated germany.
Kituko ingekuwa alikuja Tz hakwenda Kenya, like what Obama did.

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don't worry about where I studied...worry about ur sad life in a poor ldc country
You guys even if you attended to small institutions, you normally count. Eti you are coming here saying you studied in UK, you think is a big deal. Lol a Tanzanian and a Kenyan who has a sad life? Your land belongs to kenyatta, bewott, moi and kibaki. Food is a big deal in Kenya. Go to kibera and other parts of your city, i have never seen such a horrible life on earth. Failed state never come here again and start talking about eti most of Kenyans studied in UK. what's the point if you are the poorest in the world.

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wacha ujinga wewe....UK naingia kama chooni...dada zangu wawili wapo kule...sasa UK big deal inatoka wapi?? nimekwambia nenda katafte albino umle..dont mind where I studied...it does not concern you.... ldc dweller...big institution small one... who cares?
 
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