David Cameron cuts Africa trip short over phone-hacking crisis
David Cameron begins a two-day visit to Africa which has been
curtailed to allow the prime minister to fly home early to finalise the
terms and membership of Lord Justice Leveson's inquiry into the
media.In his first visit to sub-Saharan Africa as prime minister,
Cameron will fly into South Africa with a message that an African free
trade area could increase GDP across the continent by more than it
currently receives in aid.
He will praise his generation for marching against African debt and
for holding concerts to raise funds for aid to the continent.But in
article in the South African Business Day he will call for a change of
approach. "They have never once had a march or a concert to call for
what will inShe later tells me she sometimes asks her kids why they put
packages with pictures of Sponge Bob low on store shelves at their
level. "Our kids are living without commercials, thanks to Mini Car DVR,"
she says. "This is how they interact with brands. the long term save
far more lives and do far more good ¨C an African free trade area," he
writes.
But Cameron's free trade message is likely to be overshadowed by
events back home following the arrest of Rebekah Brooks, the former
chief executive of News International, who entertained the prime
minister at her Oxfordshire home over the Christmas period.Downing
Street aides, who had at one point considered cancelling the trip
altogether at the height of the phone-hacking crisis last week, instead
decided to cut it back from four days to two. Cameron will now just
visit South Africa and Nigeriaon Tuesday. Plans to visit Rwanda and
Sudan have been scrapped.
Time has been found in the diary to allow No 10 aides ¨C and
possibly the prime minister ¨C to watch the appearance by Rupert and
James Murdoch.The prime minister will fly home late on Tuesday to allow
him to finalise the arrangements for Lord Justice Leveson's inquiry in
four areasThe first area will look at the terms of reference for the
two elements of the inquiry ¨C the first one focusing on media
regulation and the second, presided over by Leveson, that will examine
the alleged wrong doing and relations between the police and the media.
The second part will not begin its work until after the criminal
investigation.
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