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Jill Biden to visit Namibia, Kenya, part of US-Africa push

The first lady will highlight issues around empowering women and young people and food insecurity in the Horn of Africa

Jill Biden
First lady Jill Biden speaks, Jan. 25, 2023, in Washington. The first lady will visit Namibia and Kenya this week as part of a push by the United States to step up engagement with Africa as a counterweight to China's influence on the continent, the White House announced Tuesday.Alex Brandon (AP)

Jill Biden will visit Namibia and Kenya this week as part of a push by the United States to step up engagement with Africa as a counterweight to China’s influence on the continent, the White House announced Tuesday. President Joe Biden told African leaders who came to Washington for a summit last year that the US is “all in” on the continent’s future and announced that he, his wife, the vice president and several members of his Cabinet would travel to Africa this year. He joked that the leaders would get tired of hosting everyone.

Jill Biden will be the third US official to visit Africa this year, following Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield.

The first lady will highlight issues around empowering women and young people and food insecurity in the Horn of Africa, which includes Kenya, that was caused by severe drought and other factors. She will also focus on deepening US relations with the two countries that are hosting her.

She was opening the five-day visit Wednesday in Namibia, becoming the most senior US official to land there since a brief stop by Vice President Al Gore in 1996, the White House said. Through renewed engagement with the countries of Africa, the US aims to catch up with its economic rival, China, which has outpaced the US in terms of trade in some of the 54 nations on the continent, the second most-populous.

Trade between the US and sub-Saharan Africa totaled $44.9 billion in 2021, a 22% increase from 2019. But direct investment fell by 5.3% to $30.3 billion. Trade between Africa and China in 2021 surged to $254 billion, up about 35% as Chinese exports increased to the continent.

Jill Biden is not a stranger to Africa. The trip will be her sixth to the continent, her third time in Kenya and her first visit to Namibia. It will also be her fourth solo trip abroad in the two years since the president took office. She traveled to Tokyo in 2021 to cheer Team USA at the delayed Olympic Games. For Mother’s Day last year, she traveled to Romania and Slovakia to meet with Ukrainian women who fled with their children after Russia’s military invasion. The trip included a clandestine drive across Slovakia’s border a short distance into western Ukraine, where she spent several hours meeting with Olena Zalenska, the wife of Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Jill Biden also traveled solo to Costa Rica, Ecuador and Panama in 2022.

She has accompanied her husband on trips to Europe and Mexico, where he participated in summit meetings with other world leaders.

During the US-Africa Leaders Summit in December, the first lady hosted two days of events for the spouses, including her counterparts from Kenya and Namibia.

President Biden is expected to visit Africa later this year, though the White House has not announced his travel dates. He was in Poland on Tuesday following a surprise visit to Ukraine on Monday to meet with Zelenskyy.

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