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To: Fred Nerks; Seizethecarp

“INTERNAL MEMO
FROM: SHAKEEL SHABBIR (CAMPAIGN RESOURCES ACCOUNTING SECTION)”

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2008/may/02/chain-email/not-a-cent-from-unrelated-obama/

“Obama ... gave almost a million dollars to the (Kenya) opposition campaign who just happened to be his cousin, Raila Odinga.”
Chain e-mail on Friday, April 18th, 2008 in
‘Not a cent’ from unrelated Obama

A chain e-mail that originates with a letter from American missionaries working in Kenya warns about Sen. Barack Obama’s ties to Kenya and its opposition party, encouraging readers “not to be taken in by those that are promoting him.”
Among the many allegations is one about Obama’s ties to Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga: “Obama under ‘friends of Obama’ gave almost a million dollars to the (Kenya) opposition campaign who just happened to be his cousin, Raila Odinga, who is a socialist trained in East Germany.”
The e-mail reads like a bad game of “telephone,” its claims drawn from assorted people and sources that have been stitched together. And yet, because it is signed by real people, who have a life in Africa, it somehow carries more credence than your average blog posting — and it’s spreading rapidly. But even with the credibility of a real author, the claims in this e-mail are as baseless as anything you’ve read from an anonymous blogger.
Celeste Davis wrote the letter. Her husband, Loren Davis, spoke to PolitiFact at length about its many allegations.
He says they’ve lived and worked in Kenya for the past 12 years and this was a personal letter “never intended to be forwarded or sent out to the Web.”
“It’s totally caught us by surprise,” Loren Davis said. He went on to back up the claims and provide some evidence.
Let’s examine this one in two parts:
• “Obama under ‘friends of Obama’ gave almost a million dollars to the (Kenya) opposition campaign.”
Loren Davis provided PolitiFact with a document that he says shows Obama gave $1-million to the Kenyan opposition campaign led by Odinga. A header at the top of the page says it’s a “consolidated statement of campaign financial activities.” Under the header is a list of “incoming resources” with entries listed in columns of “from” and “amount.”
Handwritten notes amplify the point being made. A name on the list is underlined and the words “Barak Obama” are written in the margin, suggesting that donation is from the Illinois senator, even though his name is misspelled. The amount across from this name also is underlined and next to it someone has written “$1 million,” implying Obama contributed $1-million.
The Obama campaign strongly disputes this allegation and three Kenya experts who reviewed the document at our request called it fraudulent. The Obama campaign sent PolitiFact the same document and one other purporting to show Obama’s campaign contributions to Kenya. The first they heard of it was when these documents arrived by fax.
See the documents here and here.
On the legible version, you can see the underlined entry says, “Friends of Senator BO,” presumably Barack Obama. Only, there is no political action committee named Friends of Senator BO or Friends of Barack Obama. So says Obama’s campaign. And a search of the Federal Election Commission Web site and Opensecrets.org, the Web site of the Center for Responsive Politics, pulls up neither. In fact, there’s no PAC name even close.
Not to mention, the Obama campaign says the senator never gave money to Kenyan Prime Minister Odinga. And Salim Lone, spokesman for Odinga whom we spoke with in Kenya, confirms that.
“That is absolutely ridiculous,” Lone said in an interview with PolitiFact. “Mr. Obama did not donate a single cent to Mr. Odinga’s campaign.”
Just to be certain, we did an analysis of Federal Election Commission reports of disbursements from Obama’s principal presidential campaign committee, Obama for America, during the 2008 election cycle. We searched for “Kenya,” “Odinga” and “ODM,” (the Orange Democratic Movement) the latter being Odinga’s political party, and came up with no matches.
( UPDATE: In June 2008, a reader correctly pointed out that there was a “Friends of Barack Obama” PAC on the Illinois state level from 1995-2005. We analyzed reports of disbursements from this PAC, searching for “Kenya,” “Odinga” and “ODM.” We came up with no matches.)
And what about the second part of the quote?
• “Who just happened to be his cousin, Raila Odinga, who is a socialist trained in East Germany.”
This part of the claim stems from an interview Odinga did with BBC News in January 2008. ( Listen to it here. ) In a discussion about the political situation in Kenya amid fallout from a disputed election — where Odinga’s party rejected official results and vowed to install Odinga as the “people’s president” — the following exchange occurs:
Odinga: “Barack Obama’s father is my maternal uncle.”
BBC: “You’re related to him?”
Odinga: “Yes, I am.”
No, you’re not, says the Obama campaign.
We spoke to three Kenya experts who dismiss this part of the claim as well, suggesting Odinga made the connection to give himself more legitimacy during the political crisis.
“It’s stretched to the point of ridiculousness,” said Joel D. Barkan, political science professor emeritus at the University of Iowa and senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. “To my knowledge, they are not first cousins in the normal sense. To my knowledge, there’s absolutely no relationship at all.”
Alex Awiti, a Kenyan postdoctoral fellow at Columbia University, says you have to consider the context of when Odinga was speaking, that being in the middle of a political crisis.
“Raila Odinga was groping all over the place, trying to find some political legitimacy to get on a high pedestal to claim leadership and using Obama was basically going to add some political points,” said Awiti, who lived in Kenya until three years ago. “This is very opportunistic and it should be totally disregarded.”
Lone, Odinga’s spokesman, said cousins in the African sense is very different from cousins in the American sense, so they might be distant relatives.
As far as being trained in East Germany, Odinga’s own Web site says he attended Herder Institute in Leipzig, Germany, and earned a master’s degree from the Otto von Guericke Technical Institute in Magdeburg, Germany. Both cities were part of the former East Germany.
But again, our Kenya experts say that doesn’t make him a socialist.
“It should have said he was a socialist trained in East Germany,” Barkan said. “He’s populist politics, but he’s no socialist.”
A nugget of truth in a mountain of wholesale inaccuracy does nothing to diminish our ruling on this irresponsible claim. Neither does the fact the American author says it wasn’t meant for worldwide distribution. This is Pants on Fire wrong.

http://thehill.com/component/content/article/277-lynn-sweet/5430-codel-obama

Codel Obama
By Lynn Sweet - 09/06/06 07:00 PM ET
It’s Saturday, and Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) is on his trip to Africa, sitting in the back seat of a UN plane flying from near the Chad-Sudan border — he visited a camp housing Sudanese refugees who fled violence in Darfur — to the airport at Abeche, Chad.
It’s Saturday, and Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) is on his trip to Africa, sitting in the back seat of a UN plane flying from near the Chad-Sudan border — he visited a camp housing Sudanese refugees who fled violence in Darfur — to the airport at Abeche, Chad.
There, Obama will switch to a U.S. military aircraft to return to the capital, N’Djamena, the last stop on his first solo try at diplomacy.
Codel Obama, as the trip is officially called, is a congressional delegation of one, authorized by Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Last year, freshman Obama traveled with Lugar to Russia and other former Soviet republics on his first codel and then in another trip flew to Iraq, Israel and Kuwait.
Most congressional visitors come and go with little notice. But the combination of a compelling personal and political storyline — a return to Kenya of an almost native son and the possibility that the Illinois Democrat could have a White House run in his future — attracted a traveling press corps of U.S. writers, photographers and videographers that swelled to more than 20 when Obama toured his father’s homeland in August.
Codel Obama touched down in South Africa, Kenya, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Chad. Obama met two presidents — Kenya’s Mwai Kibaki and Chad’s Idriss D

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2008/aug/20/jerome-corsi/obama-did-not-take-sides-in-kenya/

Barack Obama “openly supported (opposition leader) Raila Odinga during his visit to Africa in 2006.”
Jerome R. Corsi on Friday, August 1st, 2008 in his book “The Obama Nation”

Obama did not take sides in Kenya

A new book — The Obama Nation by Jerome R. Corsi — attacks Barack Obama as a political extremist. Taken as a whole, the book’s primary argument is that Obama is a likely communist sympathizer with ties to Islam who has skillfully hidden his true agenda as he ruthlessly pursues elected office.
We found factual problems with Corsi’s book and question its overall tone; read our extended story here.
Corsi’s description of Obama’s role in Kenyan politics is filled with errors and innuendo. Corsi focuses on a 2006 trip Obama made to Africa as a U.S. senator. The visit included stops in South Africa, Kenya and Chad.
Obama’s trip came about a year before elections were scheduled in Kenya. On one side was incumbent President Mwai Kibaki; one of his main challengers was Raila Odinga.
Corsi alleges in his book that Obama openly supported Odinga, because Obama wanted to avenge his father’s tribe, the Luo, against rival tribes. Corsi also suggests that Odinga is a socialist and was part of an alliance with Muslims to expel Christians in Kenya.
There are a number of problems here. First, we reported previously that Odinga is not a socialist . The alliance Corsi describes between Muslims and socialists seems conjecture at best. Corsi himself says his case hinges on a secret memo that he admits may or may not exist. Corsi then states that Odinga “professes to be an Anglican Christian” but adds that “concerns even today continue to circulate among Kenya’s Christian leaders ... that Odinga intends to pursue an undeclared radical Islamic political agenda.” His argument here is highly speculative.
What we can confirm is that Obama has remained neutral in Kenyan politics, and did not support Odinga during his trip. Odinga attended some of Obama’s events while Obama was in Kenya, and clearly wanted to associate himself with Obama, but there is no evidence to indicate that Obama “openly supported” Odinga. (We previously reported on a letter from missionaries that alleged Obama contributed to Odinga’s campaign; we rated it Pants on Fire! wrong.)
For this statement, we decided to scour the public record for evidence that Obama supported Odinga. We looked to contemporary accounts of the 2006 trip and found a transcript from an interview Obama gave to a Kenyan newspaper that directly contradicts Corsi’s allegation.
Question: “As you prepared to travel to Kenya you were obviously conscious of two things. One was about being drawn into local politics. The other was the high expectations of what you could do for Kenya now that you are a senator. How did you handle both?”
Obama: “One of the things we try to do is meet with all parties. I met President Kibaki, I met Uhuru Kenyatta, I was with Raila Odinga. We met the government, met the opposition and met other groups such as human rights activists. What I try to do is give a consistent message on what I think U.S.-Kenya relations should be, but not to suggest somehow that I think one party is better than the other. That’s for the Kenyan people to decide.”
Also, Obama’s gave a high-profile speech the need for the country to move beyond corruption and tribal rivalries. This undercuts Corsi’s theory that Obama was motivated by his Luo tribal heritage.
“Finally, ethnic-based tribal politics has to stop,” Obama said in his speech at the University of Nairobi on Aug. 28, 2006. “It is rooted in the bankrupt idea that the goal of politics or business is to funnel as much of the pie as possible to one’s family, tribe, or circle with little regard for the public good. It stifles innovation and fractures the fabric of the society. Instead of opening businesses and engaging in commerce, people come to rely on patronage and payback as a means of advancing. Instead of unifying the country to move forward on solving problems, it divides neighbor from neighbor.”
Corsi states that Obama “openly supported” Raila Odinga. We found public statements from Obama during the trip saying the exact opposite. We found no other evidence to support Corsi’s statement, so we rate his statement False.


110 posted on 01/23/2010 9:38:26 AM PST by Sectumsepra
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To: Sectumsepra; Seizethecarp

http://www.network54.com/Forum/204096/thread/1200846405/last-1200846405/ODM

I didn’t bother to read beyond the first lines of your comment, the DOCUMENT linked above is in no way connected to the e-mail you are writing about.


119 posted on 01/23/2010 1:50:34 PM PST by Fred Nerks (FAIR DINKUM!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 110 | View Replies ]

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