Fiche du document numéro 13467

Num
13467
Date
Monday May 9, 1994
Amj
Hms
Taille
83438
Titre
Gore speaks of new U.S. partnership with S.Africa
Cote
lba0000020030220dq5900sbx
Source
Fonds d'archives
Type
Dépêche d'agence
Langue
EN
Citation
JOHANNESBURG, May 9 (Reuter) - U.S. Vice-President Al Gore arrived for
Tuesday's inauguration of Nelson Mandela as South Africa's first black
president, saying it would mark the beginning of a partnership between
the two countries.

President Bill Clinton is also being represented at the ceremony by his
wife Hillary, who arrived in a separate plane ahead of Gore on Monday.

The vice-president told reporters at Johannesburg's Jan Smuts airport
the inauguration was a historical moment for South Africa and all
humankind
.

The transition from white dominance to black majority rule was a
peaceful, negotiated revolution
, he said.

We see this inauguration as the beginning of a partnership between our
two countries that has the potential not only to bring our two peoples
togther, but also to export the lessons of democracy, market economics,
harmony and brotherhood to other parts of Africa and to other parts of
our world,
Gore said.

He said there had been an exchange of ideas between the civil rights
movement in the United States and black Africans in South Africa, and
spoke of lessons being vigorously exported to South Africa.

Gore and Hillary Clinton were to attend a cultural evening in
Johannesburg on Monday night before the inauguration in Pretoria.

The vice-president was due to meet Mandela for about an hour on
Tuesday.

I will be discussing with Mr. Mandela how we can be most helpful in
facilitating South Africa's relationship to the G-7 and to other
nations with whom we can have influence in their behalf,
Gore said.

Gore, Mrs. Clinton and most members of the U.S delegation attended a
performance Monday night at the Market Theatre.

The U.S. vice-president also intends to use his visit to South Africa
to discuss the crisis in Rwanda, where ethnic bloodletting has left an
estimated 200,000 dead and touched off a massive flood of refugees.

Gore will talk with Mandela and other African leaders about what can be
done to end the violence. The bloodshed has touched off condemnation at
the United Nations and elsewhere, but little consensus on how to deal
with it.

He heads to Namibia on Wednesday for talks with President Sam Nujoma
and will spend the night at a game preserve. Gore also stops briefing
in Benin before returning to the United States on Friday.

(c) Reuters Limited 1994

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