Foto: Keňa ví, kdo bude vládnout Americe

2/20 Přehled fotografií
A man walks before a rainstorm in Kogelo village, the ancestral home of U.S. President Barack Obama in Nyangoma Kogelo, 430 km (367 miles) west of Kenya's capital Nairobi, November 5, 2012. Four years ago, Kogelo, and Africa in general, celebrated with noisy gusto when Obama, whose father came from the scattered hamlet of tin-roofed homes, became the first African-American to be elected president of the United States. Looking across the Atlantic to the November 6 presidential election, the continent is cooler now towards the "son of Africa" who is seeking a second term. There are questions too whether his Republican rival, Mitt Romney, will have more to offer to sub-Saharan Africa if he wins the White House. To match Analysis AFRICA-USA/ELECTION REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya (KENYA - Tags: SOCIETY POLITICS ELECTIONS USA PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION) Published: Lis. 5, 2012, 3:39 odp.
Ke Keni se váže ještě jedna zajímavost. Pochází odsud rodina stávajícího prezidenta USA, který nyní ve své zemi bojuje o znovuzvolení. Díváte se na vesnici Kogelo, která leží asi 430 kilometrů od keňské metropole Nairobi. Právě odsud pochází část rodinného klanu Obamů.
Foto: Reuters
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