Skip Navigation
Cancel
[ Top Five News ]
Rebecca Walker

UNTIL I HAD A CHILD, I thought microwaves were little nuclear reactors, just waiting to explode

Keith Josef Adkins

IRON MAN: Obama's Greatest Endorser

Jimi Izrael

HOW CAN WE stop the cops from killing our boys?

Veronica Chambers

LAUGH THERAPY: Looking Good for Jesus

Melissa Harris-Lacewell

JOHN EDWARDS HAS decided to endorse Barack for the Democratic nomination.  I love this endorsement for so many reasons. Both of these men have been my Senator at one point.  John Edwards was my Senator during my final years of graduate school at Duke. Obama was my Senator during my last years living in Chicago. I have great affection for both of them.

Marc Lamont Hill

IS HILLARY REALLY ROCKY? At first, I dismissed it as yet another ridiculous attempt to paint herself as a working class underdog rather than the delusional underachiever that she's been this election season.  Upon closer examination, however, I remembered something interesting about Rocky. Although he fought to the bloody end, the stubborn pugilist lost the first time around. To whom did he lose? That's right, a cocky black guy. That's when I realized that there's probably more truth to this Rocky thing than I imagined.

Tanzania summit to draw African and African-American leaders

May 6, 2008 --  More than a thousand prominent African-American leaders, executives, entertainers and activists will head to Tanzania for a summit with their African counterparts to help raise living standards on the world's poorest continent.

The heads of states of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) are seen at the Mulungushi International Conference Center in Lusaka, Zambia, Saturday, April 12, 2008. Southern African leaders are holding an emergency summit to find a resolution to Zimbabwe's deepening political crisis, but Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has refused to attend, underlining his growing isolation in the region and the world. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
Type Size

By EDITH M. LEDERER

NEW YORK  _ More than a thousand prominent African-American leaders, executives, entertainers and activists will head to Tanzania for a summit with their African counterparts to help raise living standards on the world's poorest continent.

Organizers said Monday that U.S. participants in the Sullivan Summit next month will include executives from the Coca-Cola Co., General Electric, Chevron Corp. and Procter and Gamble. Civil rights leader Jesse Jackson, comedian Chris Tucker and professional basketball player Kelenna Azubuike also plan to attend.

"This is kind of a poor man's African Davos," said summit co-chairman Andrew Young, referring to the annual economic forum in the Swiss mountain resort. "It's a potpourri of ideas and projects and our efforts to respond to the needs of Africa."

Young, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and mayor of Atlanta, said the meeting will focus on topics ranging from climate change and energy needs to jobs for young people, improving health care and coping with rising food prices.

The June 2-6 gathering in Arusha, Tanzania will give American businesses "a good sounding board as to what ideas and what products, and frankly what countries, are most susceptible and ready for investment" in Africa, he added.

There are 4.5 million African-Americans whose ancestors came to the United States during the slave trade and more than 5 million Africans who have come to the U.S. since 1970 as students or political refugees, Young said.

Tanzania's U.N. Ambassador Augustine Mahiga called the summits serve as "a bridge over the Atlantic, connecting Africa and the Americas — a multipurpose bridge ... (to) serve political, technical and economic ends."

"It is time to address the problems of poverty, ignorance and diseases with the help of the Americans — African-Americans who left the continent in disarray, in chaos, as slaves — and it is a time to rekindle the roots and the bones of a common origin and a new era of solidarity," Mahiga said.

The summits began in 1991 and were the brainchild of Rev. Leon H. Sullivan, a civil rights crusader who called for companies doing business in South Africa to give opportunities to their black workers — an initiative that helped end apartheid.

___

On the Net:

www.thesullivanfoundation.org

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.

Discuss:

Tanzania summit to draw African and African-American leaders