Jill Biden on week long tour of 3 African countries

Jill Biden, the wife of Vice President Joe Biden, is spending part of her summer vacation in Africa this week, highlighting female empowerment, education and leadership during stops in three countries.

She was scheduled to arrive in Lusaka, Zambia, on Tuesday, and be accompanied there by Rajiv Shah, director of the U.S. Agency for International Development. She is also traveling with Catherine Russell, the U.S. ambassador at-large for global women's issues.

Stops are also planned in Congo and Sierra Leone before Biden returns to Washington next week.

The trip is a chance for Biden, a lifelong educator who teaches English twice a week at a community college, to highlight what happens when women and girls are empowered through education and entrepreneurship, administration officials said.

She will also highlight success stories that are taking shape in the central and west African countries she is visiting on her third trip to the continent since Joe Biden became vice president. In Sierra Leone, for example, democracy is slowly being re-established after brutal civil war from 1991-2002 that caused tens of thousands of deaths and displaced more than 2 million people, about one-third of the population.

During the week, Biden will meet with government and non-government leaders who specialize in women's issues, including economic empowerment, entrepreneurship, education, gender-based violence, and child and maternal health, the White House said.

The trip will also showcase U.S. involvement on the continent a month before dozens of leaders from across Africa arrive in Washington in early August for a summit scheduled to be hosted by President Barack Obama.

 

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