Out of Africa: The Swamp
 
The Swamp
-
Posted September 3, 2006 4:09 PM
The Swamp

Posted by Jeff Zeleny at 4:09 p.m. CDT

N'DJAMENA, Chad – Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) flew out of this central African capital early today, bound for Frankfurt, Germany. He was scheduled to arrive in Chicago this afternoon.
Img_7471

In a two-week trip to Africa, he visited the countries of South Africa, Kenya, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Chad. A side trip to Congo was cancelled at the request of the U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa, which was consumed with the violent fallout of the presidential elections.

As he returned from touring the Miles Refugee Camp in eastern Chad yesterday, he reflected on the trip in an interview with reporters. He spoke over the loud buzzing of a United Nations propeller-driven airplane.

"Visiting Nelson Mandela's cell," he said, "was a highlight for me personally."

To Obama, the reaction to taking an AIDS test with his wife, Michelle, in Kisumu, Kenya, also was among the most notable moments of his trip.

"It was a small gesture," he said, "that could actually save some lives."

So what's the next foreign trip he'd like to take?

"Should we get a chance to travel next year," Obama said, "I'm very interested in going to China and Indonesia, where ironically I have more of a childhood connection than I do to Kenya."

(He spent time in Indonesia as a boy, after his mother temporarily moved from Hawaii.)

While the senator's journey to Africa received a considerable amount of attention – few congressional delegation trips have press contingents that swell, at least at one point, up to two-dozen – here are a few final items from the notebook.

Cell phones can be more reliable in third-world villages than in parts of the U.S.

"In some of the remote areas of Africa, cell phone service is better than in Southern Illinois," Obama said, noting with disgust that "something is wrong" when his phone works better on the Masai Mara game preserve in rural Kenya than in Downstate Illinois.

"All of Africa," he said, "is essentially avoiding land-based phones."

(Blackberries didn't always work so well, but text messaging worked like a charm virtually every place but Ethiopia.)

U.S. troops stationed in Djibouti play a better game of basketball than a visiting senator

"Not to make any excuses, but I was awful," Obama said, noting that a combination of three hours sleep and 100-degree heat impacted his game. "

Gasoline is a precious – and scarce – resource

The senator had just arrived in Kisumu, Kenya – the first stop on a homecoming visit to his grandmother's house – and the motorcade took off at a furious pace. The caravan grew longer by the minute, picking up random cars, pickup trucks and even motor scooters along the way.
Img_7207

A ramshackle bus carrying reporters, photographers and even two documentary film crews was falling behind. The engine sputtered. The gas gauge said empty. So as the motorcade proceeded, the bus pulled into a gas station.

A furious Robert Gibbs, Obama's communications director, bounded out the door with local currency in his hand. He walked to the gas pumps and stood watch as the driver began filling the tank on the bus, which had the name "Sampson" painted on the front.

By now, the press had become separated from the senator in a chaotic crowd of thousands. At the time, it was far from amusing.

It did, however, evoke a memory of a previous night in Pretoria, South Africa, when a taxi also ran out of gas and Gibbs and others suddenly found themselves pushing a white van – in the dark – toward the nearest gas station.

Only in Africa.

Digg Delicious Facebook Fark Google Newsvine Reddit Yahoo

Comments

Frankfort is in Illinois. Frankfurt is in Germany.


O My,
A ramshackle bus,engines sputtering,gas guage said empty,a furious Robert Gibbs "bounded out" and watched the gas pumper guy....Oh WOW!!!
Welcome home Barak....you can gat gas here!
Now,do something for Illinois!
Paulo


Bruce,

Here's another Barack Obama story for you to bash.
By the way,when was the last time George Dubya ever took a fact finding,or "soul" searching trip?? Crawford Texas doesn't count.

I guess he could go to Saudi Arabia,and wrap his arms around his beloved oil wells.


After Dubya's doings, America can use all the good will we can get.

Well done Senator.


All those reporters trailing their idol, and still not one question, let alone answer, as to how much this junket cost the taxpayers. I don't blame Obama too much for trying to soak the taxpayers to pay for his junket, or his family vacation--he's just a typical politician, doing what typical politicians do. But reporters, in theory at least and in places other than the Tribune, get paid to ask these questions.


Nice to see an acknowledgement from a US senator that the rest of the world isn't just there for target practice.

$300 billion and counting for the Iraqi war or the tab from this visit? I know which one I think offers better value.


He ought to go back to Congress and ask for a resolution for the US to use force to stop the genocide in Darfur.


OHCD, yeah, the money and manpower the U.S. sent to the tsunami-devastated regions, earthquake victims in Pakistan and even Iran, earthqake victims in Turkey, the billions Bush has sent to help Africa (which has even received praise from U2's Bono, Bill Clinton and Bill Gates) I guess all of that means nothing to the loony, hateful minds on the Left. Get a clue.


Post a comment

(Anonymous comments will not be posted. Comments aren't posted immediately. They're screened for relevance to the topic, obscenity, spam and over-the-top personal attacks. We can't always get them up as soon as we'd like so please be patient. Thanks for visiting The Swamp.)

Please enter the letter "j" in the field below: