![[White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy]](../09_images/09-213a.jpg)
Washington — Capping his historic visit to Ghana, President
Obama told the Ghanaian people his visit to their country
had been “particularly meaningful” and that Ghana
sends a message to the world: “Democracy can thrive
in Africa.”
Speaking at Kotoka International Airport in Accra before
leaving, Obama said he had a chance to discuss not only
the future of Ghana but the future of Africa with Ghanaian
President John Atta Mills, who also spoke and was there
to bid farewell to the U.S. president.
“I have spoken to the parliament here in Ghana about
America’s commitment to supporting democracy and development,”
Obama told those gathered to see him off. Obama then fondly
recalled his visit to La General Hospital for a visit with
women and children who are getting the health care they
need.
Additionally, he mentioned his tour of Cape Coast Castle
with his family. It was “a place for centuries where
men, women and children of this nation and surrounding areas
were sold into slavery.”
“I will never forget the image of my two young daughters,
the descendants of Africans and African-Americans, walking
through those doors of no return but then walking back (through)
those doors. … It was a remarkable reminder that while
the future is unknowable, the winds always blow in the direction
of human progress.”
Obama told the Ghanaian people that “at each point
of our visit here, I was reminded of the enduring bond between
our nations. The men and women taken from this nation helped
to build my own. Today, many of our leading citizens trace
their roots to these shores. Your first president attended
a university in the United States, as did your current one.”
Obama also praised the Peace Corps volunteers who were
present. Ghana was the first nation that hosted such volunteers.
Great civil rights leaders in the United States like Martin
Luther King, he said, “looked to the independence
movement here in Ghana and asked themselves, ‘If Africans
can live freely in Africa, why can’t African-Americans
live freely in America?’”
Today, Obama told the Ghanaian people, “both our
nations are diverse and vibrant democracies. Here in Ghana
many different ethnic groups speak many languages but have
found a way to live and work together in peace. People here
can speak freely and worship freely. You have a robust civil
society, fair elections and free press, a growing market
economy and a sense of energy and optimism.”
For those reasons, Obama said, “we in America are
proud of our partnership with Ghana. Together we work to
advance education and fight poverty. We have made real and
measurable strides in fighting diseases from malaria to
tuberculosis to polio and neglected tropical diseases. This
is a partnership we intend to continue,” and the partnership
is based on shared interests and shared ideals forged in
“struggles for independence.”
In closing, he said, it is “up to each of us,”
not just the people of Ghana but those in the rest of Africa
as well, to uphold the principles of democracy. “America
wants to partner with the people and nations of Africa,
but we all know that the future of Africa is in the hands
of Africa.”
Speaking to the young people of Africa, he said, “The
world is what you make it. You have the power to hold your
leaders accountable and to build institutions to serve the
people.”
He pledged: “If you seize this opportunity, if you
take responsibility for your future, America will be with
you every step of the way as a partner and as a friend.”