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Obama lands in Ghana after meeting pope

President wraps up G-8 summit before first trip to sub-Saharan Africa

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  A continent embraces Obama
July 10: For weeks, anticipation for President Barack Obama's first visit to sub-Saharan Africa has gripped the West African nation of Ghana. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports from Accra, where the President received a hero's welcome on Friday.

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  Obama visits pope, gives G-8 his blessing
July 10: Wrapping up his Italy trip en route to Africa, President Barack Obama called the G-8 summit "highly productive," although there were few immediate, tangible results. NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

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  First lady wears veil in pope meeting
July 10: President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama meet Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican.

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After two days in Moscow, President Barack Obama attends G-8 summit before heading to Ghana.

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updated 8:19 p.m. ET July 10, 2009

ROME - President Barack Obama arrived in Ghana Friday on his first trip to sub-Saharan Africa.

He landed soon after 9 p.m. local time and met a group of dignitaries, led by President John Atta Mills. An ethnic African group danced and banged drums for Obama's arrival.

After traveling to Russia and then Italy for a meeting of major industrial powers, Obama is making Ghana, on Africa's west coast, the last stop of his overseas trip.

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Obama will make a speech to lawmakers there and tour an oceanfront fort once used to ship slaves to the Americas.

Earlier Friday, Obama said the world apparently has averted economic collapse but a "full recovery is still a ways off."

Obama, speaking at the end of the Group of Eight summit of major economic powers shortly before meeting with Pope Benedict XVI, said world leaders had taken significant measures to address economic, environmental and global security issues.

"Reckless actions by a few have fueled a recession that spans the globe," Obama said of the meltdown that began in the United States with a tumble in housing prices and drastic slowing of business lending. The downturn now threatens superpowers and emerging nations alike.

Obama urged national leaders to unite behind a global recovery plan that includes stricter financial regulation and sustained stimulus spending.

"The only way forward is through shared and persistent effort to combat threats to our peace, our peace, our prosperity and our common humanity wherever they may exist. None of this will be easy," Obama told a news conference at the end of the Group of Eight summit of major economic powers.

On other issues he said:

  • World leaders will reevaluate their posture toward Iran at a meeting in Pittsburgh in September of the world's 20 major industrial and developing economies. He cited "the appalling events of Iran's presidential election" and said the world would "take stock of Iran's progress" and watch its behavior.
  • That his top legislative priority — health care overhaul — had encountered rocky going in Congress during his overseas trip, with opposition building among both Republicans and economically conservative Democrats. Asked if that timetable was "do or die," Obama responded: "I never believe anything is do or die. But I want to get it done by the August recess."
  • Rising food prices mean millions more are falling into desperate poverty "and right now, at this defining moment, we face a choice. We can either shape our future or let events shape it for us." (Leaders at Friday's meetings also committed themselves to a $20 billion initiative to help farmers in poor countries boost production.)
  • The U.S. and Russia must show they're "fulfilling their commitments" to lead global efforts to curb the spread. If the two superpowers show they can limit or eliminate these weapons, it would strengthen their moral authority to speak to other potential nuclear nations such as North Korea and Iran.
  • He supports a streamlining of summits — the G-8, G-20 and NATO — and attending fewer of those meetings. He said the United Nations is in need of reform, but international summits fill a gap left by a U.N. structure that doesn't leverage its power as effectively as it could.

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  Obama: 'We face a choice'
July 10: President Barack Obama wraps up the G-8 discussion in Italy saying a full economic recover is "still a ways off."

MSNBC

'Frank' talks with pope expected
After the press conference, Obama sat down with the pope at the Vatican for a meeting in which frank but constructive talks were expected between two men who agree on helping the poor but disagree on abortion and stem cell research.

Shaking hands with the pope, Obama said it was "a great honor" to meet him.

They then sat at the pontiff's desk and exchanged pleasantries before reporters and photographers were ushered out of the ornate room.

Obama met first Friday with Cardinal Tarciso Bertone, the Vatican's secretary of state.

Some Catholic activists and American bishops have been outspoken in their criticism of Obama, even as polls have shown he received a majority of Catholic votes.

Obama's election presented a challenge for the Vatican after eight years of common ground with President George W. Bush in opposing abortion, an issue that drew them together despite the Vatican's opposition to the war in Iraq.

But the Vatican has been openly interested in Obama's views and scheduled an unusual afternoon meeting to accommodate the American president at the end of his stay in Italy for a G-8 summit meeting in the earthquake-stricken city of L'Aquila and just before he leaves for Ghana.

Benedict broke Vatican protocol the day after Obama was elected by sending a personal note of congratulations rather than waiting and sending the usual brief telegram on Inauguration Day.


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