British Foreign Secretary Boris
Johnson, who notoriously sparked fury over comments about Africans made
when he worked as a journalist, will visit the continent for the first
time as minister this week.
Johnson will start
the visit Tuesday in The Gambia, where he will meet
President Adama
Barrow and visit the British-funded Medical Research Council, his
ministry said.
Johnson's trip is a first since the
country won independence from Britain in 1965.
"I'm delighted to be the
first foreign secretary to visit Gambia this week,"
Johnson said in a
statement Monday.
Barrow, who worked as a
supermarket security guard in Britain when
he was younger, defeated
long-standing hardline ruler Yahya Jammeh in polls in December.
He
then took refuge in neighbouring Senegal after Jammeh refused to
accept
the election result and sought for weeks to cling to power.
The new leader was welcomed home by jubilant crowds in late
January after Jammeh finally left the country.
The Gambia used to be part to the Commonwealth, a grouping of countries formerly ruled by Britain.
But
Jammeh pulled the country out of the Commonwealth,
calling it a
"neo-colonial institution" and announced his intention to drop
English
as an official language.
Barrow has said he wants to rekindle ties with Britain.
"I
am also very pleased that Gambia wants to rejoin the Commonwealth and
we will ensure this happens in the coming months," Johnson said.
The
British minister also hailed the December elections in
The Gambia and
Ghana, saying they "highlight the continuing strengthening of democracy
in West Africa".
In Ghana, Johnson will meet
President Nana Akufo-Addo and visit the Blue Skies company, a
juice-maker which has received financial support from Britain.
Since
being appointed last year, Johnson has been pursued by reminders
of
highly undiplomatic comments he made about different countries and
world
leaders while writing for the
Daily Telegraph before he became a
government minister.
'Watermelon smiles'
In
a column published in 2002, Johnson mocked then prime minister
Tony
Blair's international travel in an article with the headline:
"If
Blair's so good at running the Congo, let him stay there".
Gambian President Adama Barrow has said he wants to rekindle ties with Britain
He characterised the
Commonwealth as having "crowds of flag-waving
piccaninnies," using a
derogatory term for black people that caused outrage.
He
also parodied a Congolese reaction to Blair's arrival saying that
"the
tribal warriors will all break out in watermelon smiles to see the big
white chief touch down".
The politically incorrect
comments came back to haunt him when
he ran for London mayor in 2008,
and then again when he was named
foreign secretary last year after
Britain's shock Brexit vote, which brought
down the government of
premier
David Cameron, his old Etonian schoolmate.
Johnson's colourful descriptions have not been limited to Africans.
He
once compared the appearance of former US secretary of state and
recently defeated White House candidate Hillary Clinton to that of "a
sadistic nurse in a mental hospital".
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