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Mrs. Obama opened the second leg of her trip in Botswana on Friday by wielding a paint brush to help create a mural at a children's HIV/AIDS clinic sponsored by Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. The facility treats more than 4,000 children and their families. The US has spent more than $450 million since 2005 to help Botswana deal with AIDS. The country's efforts and partnerships with academic institutions and foundations have helped more than 95 percent of infected Botswanans get treatment, officials said. The first lady also had lunch with a group of women, many of whom have overcome personal challenges, and their mentors. She told them that she's proof that success isn't about money or connections because her parents had neither of those. It's "about how much one believes in their own potential," she said. After the call on Khama, Mrs. Obama ended the day at the Mokolodi Nature Reserve, where family and staff had dinner. The first lady is traveling with her daughters, Malia, 12, and Sasha, 10; her mother, Marian Robinson; and a niece and nephew, Leslie and Avery Robinson, 15 and 19, respectively. She began the trip Monday, spending two days each in Johannesburg and Cape Town in South Africa before moving on to Botswana. She is due back at the White House early Monday, after a private family safari this weekend.
[Associated
Press;
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