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Reuters
KOGELO
Former US President Barack Obama urged Kenya's leaders on Monday to turn their backs on the divisive ethnic politics that have frequently spilled over into violence and to stamp down on corruption.
Opening a school in his father's home village of Kogelo in western Kenya, Obama praised a rapprochement between President Uhuru Kenyatta and opposition leader Raila Odinga but said they must do more to heal the rifts between Kenya's 40-odd ethnic groups.
In the worst recent outbreak of ethnic conflict, 1,200 people were killed in fighting that followed disputed elections involving Odinga and Kenyatta in 2007.
"It means no longer seeing different ethnicities as enemies or rivals but rather as allies; in seeing the diversity of tribes not as a weakness but as a strength,"Obama, whose father was Kenyan, said.
America's first black president, whose eight years in office preceded Donald Trump's election in November 2016, was in Kenya to open the centre, which is run by his half sister Auma through her charity, the Sauti Kuu Foundation.
It was his fourth trip to Kenya. He made his first in 1987, a journey he chronicled in his book"Dreams From My Father", followed by a 2006 visit as a senator and then in 2015 as president.
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17/07/2018
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