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Former President Bill Clinton by way of video
monitor at the William J. Clinton Presidential Center during opening
ceremonies in Little Rock, Ark., Thursday, Nov. 18, 2004. The $165
million glass-and-steel center will be the home to Clinton's library collection of more than 80 million presidential items.
(AP) |
Former US President Bill Clinton has opened his
futuristic presidential
library at a rain-soaked ceremony in Little Rock, Arkansas.
The $165m (£88m) Clinton Presidential Center houses archives from his
White House years, with one area dedicated to the fall-out from the
Lewinsky affair.
Former US leaders George Bush and Jimmy Carter spoke, and the current
President Bush praised his Democrat predecessor.
Rock star Bono sang, and Nelson Mandela sent a video tribute.
Up to 40,000 invited guests joined the dignitaries amid persistent rain
at the site in the state capital where Mr Clinton served as governor
before becoming president.
President Bush spoke warmly of Mr Clinton, calling him an "innovator, a
serious student of policy and a man of great compassion".
"In the White House, the whole nation witnessed his brilliance and
mastery of detail, his persuasive power and his persistence," Mr Bush
said.
In reply, Mr Clinton praised Mr Bush's "vigilance" over Iraq, but
warned: "While we have to fight our enemies, we can't possibly kill, jail
or occupy all of them."
And he cautioned Americans over the dangers of social division, telling
the crowd: "Everybody contributes, everybody has a responsibility to
fulfil.
"Our differences do matter, but our common humanity matters more."
The library, a futuristic glass-and-steel building, has been described
by Britain's Economist magazine as "trailer-home chic".
It contains an estimated 80 million paper documents archived during Mr
Clinton's eight years in the White House, as well as 21 million emails and
two million photographs, Reuters news agency reports.
Despite the bipartisan opening ceremony, correspondents say the design
of the museum inside the centre may re-open some old divisions between
supporters of Mr Clinton and his critics.
An assessment of the failed Republican attempt to impeach Mr Clinton
over the Lewinsky affair features prominently inside the centre.
The impeachment affair is portrayed as a struggle for power within the
US between competing liberal and conservative interest groups.
Key phrases - including "character assassination", "politics of
persecution" and "rumours and accusations" are given prominence, while the
name of Monica Lewinsky - the intern with whom Mr Clinton had an affair -
is mentioned just twice.
Other exhibits focus on the Whitewater property scandal and domestic
welfare reform.
Mr Clinton, who was heavily involved in the design, said he hoped the
library would teach Americans "what it's like to be president".
"So when people come, I hope they will see, whether they agreed or
disagreed with what I did, that people in public life... embrace certain
policies and those policies have consequences in the lives of people."
(Agencies) |