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US opens Africa summit with call for political tolerance

– More than ‘strong men’ –

Secretary of State John Kerry said that a strong civil society can bolster democracy and the rule of law – which are “not just American values, but universal values.”

“Diversity is always a better predictor of success than uniformity. Because strong institutions are always more effective, more durable and more predictable than strong men or women,” he said.

Outside the State Department a crowd of around 100 protesters, many from Washington’s large expatriate Ethiopian community, demanded the United States not cosy up to African autocrats. READ: Uhuru 3rd best performing sub-Saharan Africa leader.

Citing the example of South Africa’s late anti-apartheid champion Nelson Mandela, Kerry said that most Africans supported limiting their leaders to two terms in office.

“We will urge leaders not to alter national constitutions for personal or political gain,” Kerry said.

But Kerry did not directly name any of the long-serving leaders – most of whom were nonetheless invited to the summit including Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang Nguema, Rwanda’s Paul Kagame, Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni or Cameroon’s Paul Biya.

Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, in office for 35 years, was also invited but sent the vice president.

Earlier Mondya, Kerry met with President Joseph Kabila of the Democratic Republic of Congo and welcomed his efforts to tackle militia violence in the war-torn nation.

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The United States has been pushing Kabila to step down in line with his constitutional limit when the vast nation goes to the polls again in 2016.

The top US diplomat also vowed that the United States would support the work of embattled gay activists and champion press freedom
“including for journalists charged with terrorism or imprisoned on arbitrary grounds.”

Ethiopia has recently charged seven bloggers and three journalists with terrorism. Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn – a key security partner – was nevertheless invited.

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